Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights

pixel skylines
$LAYYYTER

blake kathryn
wallacepolsom
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
trying on a metaphor
cherry valley forever
Peter Solarz
Stranger Things
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Claire Keane

roma★
macklin celebrini has autism

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Three Goblin Art
we're not kids anymore.

if i look back, i am lost
hello vonnie

Andulka
AnasAbdin

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@mosswench
Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights
Pottstown, Pennsylvania
1874
‘Mopsa the Fairy’ by Jean Ingelow, 1887
i want so badly to be more offline but alas the siren call of images
i love you practical effects i love you corn syrup blood i love you set designers i love you creature artists i love you makeup and prosthetics i love you costumers i love you actors who sit in the makeup chair for 5 hours i love you makeup artists i love you practical sets i love you puppetry i love you miniatures and bigatures
3/10/2019 NPR: Archaeologists Find Trove Of Maya Artifacts Dating Back 1,000 Years
A local resident told the archeologists about the secret cave, known as Balamku or “Jaguar God.”
Goddess Studies: Ixchel
Ixchel is the Mayan Goddess of the Moon, Medicine, Weaving, and Childbirth. Ixchel is often depicted as a Triple Goddess or as a jaguar. The maiden aspect of Ixchel is associated with weaving and medicine. Her mother aspect is associated with sexuality, motherhood, the moon, and fertility. Her crone aspect is associated with earth, rain, medicine, and death. It is not entirely known what her name means in the ancient Mayan laguage, but “chel” translates to “rainbow”. Other glyphs of Ixchel’s name appear to have a prefix that translates to “red”. Historians believe that this Goddess may have had a few different names associated with her. Mayan depictions of Ixchel have her wearing a headdress adorned with entwined serpents. She also has crossbones on her skirt, and oftentimes has claws instead of human hands and feet. Mayan women who wanted to secure a successful marriage or pregnancy would travel to the sacred island of Cozumel, which housed a sanctuary dedicated to Ixchel. Here they would offer the Goddess gifts like turquoise, amber, cacao beans, and other traditional Mayan offerings. This was considered a very important pilgrimage to the Mayan people. Along with being a temple, the island served as a sanctuary to women from all walks of life. It also served as an orphanage and a honey bee sanctuary. Long ago, Ixchel fell in love with the Sun, who soon became her lover. But their love affair was not meant to be, and caused much destruction on earth. The waters of the ocean rose and created a great tsunami that flooded the land. Ixchel’s grandfather became angry with his granddaughter and the destruction she had wrought on the land, and struck her down from the sky with a lightning bolt in a fit of rage. Ixchel died and fell to the earth. There she lay for thirteen days, mourned by the dragonflies until she was resurrected. But once she returned to her lover, she found him to be jealous. He accused her of having an affair with his brother, the Morning Star, to which Ixchel vehemently denied having a connection with. But the Sun’s accusations had changed something within the Goddess, so she left him to start her own life. She became an independent Goddess who helped her fellow women through childbirth and fertility. Ixchel is often called upon when all seems lost and you must find another way of being.
Correspondence Chart:
Pantheon: Mayan Animals: Jaguar, Dragonfly, Snake Symbols: Crescent Moon, Rainbow, Weaving Element: Water Stones: Turquoise, Jade, Amber Colors: Red Issues & Intentions: moon magick, fertility, childbirth, weaving, medicine, divine feminine, feminine power, warriors, healing
Mexica Ritual Ceremony
A powerful video that embodies the energy of the ancient Mayans and Aztecs. Deeply beautiful and intense.
Indigenous Mayan women in Guatemala have passed down the tradition of weaving for over 2,000 years. But when a 36-year-long civil war in the late 20th century threatened Mayan culture, wearing traditional clothing became dangerous. In the 15 years following the war, groups of women have banded together to sustain themselves and their families through weaving. We visited a group in San Juan La Laguna to see how it is fighting to keep the craft alive.
The weavers sell their products locally and through Trama Textiles' website: https://tramatextiles.org/
Mayan head piece of a jaguar.
“These peculiar objects , one of which was found in an E-III-3 tomb, are of unknown use. Some see vaguely phallic association. Others, such as the late Stephan de Borhegyi, connect them with the cult of the hallucinogenic mushrooms still to this day prevalent in the Mexican highlands, and it is claimed that the mortars and pestles with which the stones are so often associated were used in the preparatory rites”
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Micheal D. Coe
Super fucked up that I can’t be a master-level expert in knitting AND woodworking AND silversmithing AND embroidery AND soap making AND spinning AND -
La Collectionneuse (1967) dir. Éric Rohmer
grace dolls undercover jun takahashi for a magazine