styofa doing anything

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
$LAYYYTER

izzy's playlists!
will byers stan first human second
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA

roma★
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TVSTRANGERTHINGS

Origami Around
Show & Tell

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
noise dept.
Misplaced Lens Cap

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
trying on a metaphor

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@pantslessness
but a woman is a changeling, always shifting shape, just when you think you have it figured out something new begins to take
black sails XXIX // XXI // VIII // XV // XXXV
man: has anyone ever told you you’re beautiful? me: oh no sir, today is my first day out of doors and papà forbade mirrors in the house lest we fall victim to vanity
“The most powerful thing that Debbie ever did was loving Ruth.”
—Betty Gilpin
Daniel Craig is not fucking around
Absolutely love Daniel Craig going off in this!!
“In what ways should young men base their personalities around James Bond?”
“Any young man who wants to base his personality on Bond needs therapy.”
Wicked (2024) // Wicked: For Good (2025)
(open pages for better image quality)
the moment I heard elphaba's delivery of "there's a girl i know..." in i'm not that girl i knew i had to draw this comic, i strongly recommend listening to it while you read for the full experience!
this comic is a companion to this piece (which was inspired by glinda's delivery of the same line in the i'm not that girl reprise).
pages 1-4 are from elphie's pov, pages 5-8 are from glinda's.
digital pdf zine in higher quality available here.
prints of individual pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
flower meanings in order of appearance:
love that in the wickedverse, this poor 12 year old is just stuck in the middle of the most insane dyke drama Oz has ever seen
Incidentally if you know enough about what you're doing you absolutely can get several-hundred-dollars pieces of furniture for like $30
If you know enough about what you're doing, and are able to give it a good enough investment of time and energy, you can overhaul a whole space for free, though it will indeed take some patience and advance planning
And all of these things are actually more effective and more exciting the more anticonsumerist and the more ecofriendly and humanist you get with it
A beautiful space that you genuinely enjoy and like spending time in is not beyond you, I promise
It's something you can learn how to build - whether for both yourself, for the people you love, for your community, or for the people all around you
Tips for doing this/gaining/developing these skills:
It's not usually a one-and-done thing. You need to train yourself to be an opportunist and think outside of the retail boxes
Make a list of every single thing you are looking for, whether it's an arm chair or "something for the wall above my bed," and then keep a look out for any opportunity you might have to Get the Thing:
Make some kind of blog or pinterest or vision board for the kinds of things you're interested in, so you can start figuring out what you like and really developing and creating a personal sense of taste
Make two lists, saved somewhere you can easily add to them: (1): Things you need (e.g., a new chair, a new outdoor table, a bunch of wall art) and (2): Things that would be nice to have (e.g., cool shit, also a bunch of wall art)
If you live somewhere in a city where people put old/free stuff out on the curb (ime this is most places since COVID), keep an eye on the curbs and corners whenever you're driving somewhere or going for a walk
Make a habit of visiting thift stores every so often (esp with friends), even just a couple times a year. You have to make this a habit because it's not like a regular store where you can basically Guarantee whether they will have what you need/are looking for a lot of the time - so keep in mind all the areas in which you might want to Get Something, and keep checking back regularly (that sounds so tedious if you do this right it's actually really fun
Hole-in-the-wall vintage and antique shops will often have some really good pieces for surprisingly cheap
Literally look up all the stores in your area using the keywords: thrift, vintage, reuse, consignment. Keep a list of them saved somewhere so that when you're in the mood to hit something up, you have easy options ready at hand
Even better, if you can - look up stores using those keywords for the nearest wealthy area(s). "Consignment" and vintage stores in those areas will often still be way fancy and pricey - but VERY few things work better than hitting up the three or four nearest Goodwills and Out of the Closests in a rich neighborhood. That shit is so much nicer and more plentiful a lot of the time
Generally, the less something looks like an Apple store, the more successful you'll be
Outlets are also cool. Little known fun fact: Nordstrom has a furniture outlet called GDF Studios. So shit will sometimes be like: at Nordstrom: $700, at GDF Studios: $150, at GDF sale section: $85. If you look in the right places you can find arrangements for a lot of these things
Similarly places like Ross and TJ Maxx that sell leftover stock from other brands for a discount are GREAT and absolutely worth hitting up regularly
Pick a weekend and hit up some garage/estate sales. People will post ads for these on Craigslist and street corners. I do not do this because I don't do mornings, but my aunt who's an artist will sit down with the paper/Craigslist/her facebook groups, circle four to six garage sales she wants to check out on a particular Saturday or Sunday morning, save the details, and then spend the whole morning going to them one after another, bam bam bam, with a list of exactly what she's looking for
Learn how to do some light DIY and redecoration/repair shit yourself (note: I am NOT talking about "make your own cabinets" I'm talking like. "You can fix the scratch marks on your black dresser with a sharpie" and painting your own room or installing your own curtain rods or something
Bribe your friends into helping you paint rooms/haul furniture/etc. with fun times and/or pizza, as is tradition for moving in general
Keep an eye out for creative uses for things. A lot of shit is priced by what it's for and who the target audience is. So a 7ft x 7ft tapestry or wall art piece will probably be expensive (at least if you don't want it shitty and/or dropshipped). A 7ft x 7ft cloth shower curtain with a cute pattern, on the other hand? $20 at somewhere like Target, $10-12 at Ross or something. (This is how I got the giant plant art tapestry above my bed that I get many compliments on)
Keep an eye on your local "free" and "furniture" and "art" sections on Craigslist (be on the lookout for scams tho)
Join the Facebook group for your local branch of Buy Nothing or Free & For Sale (note: things on this often go very fast)
Depending on where you are, your local library or another local organization (e.g. a Grange, 4H, or rotary club, if you're somewhere moral rural)
Church thrift event days are great actually, because it's concentrating stuff from so many people
Swap meets
Clothing swaps
Get involved in local fibercraft or traditional craft groups, esp sewing and/or woodworking. This will connect you with contacts, resources, ideas, possibilities, and - if you get regularly involved enough, esp in a group that's mostly older (which many of these are) - access to stuff people are clearing out of their own stashes
And finally, the biggest, best, most valuable and effective tip, especially for bigger overhauls and straight-up furniture:
Pick the nearest university or college town, especially one where a lot of students live on campus. Look up what date their finals week is. Drive around student-heavy neighborhoods during the week of and after finals. You WILL find some really nice fucking furniture on the curb, I promise
The end of the college/school year is also the best time to check sites like Buy Nothing and Free & For Sale, because people are getting rid of things while they move, and in some cases - especially near nice universities - the things they put on the curb are very, very nice indeed
If you want to be really, really powerful, do a thrift store day on a major sale holiday - Labor Day, President's Day, Black Friday, Memorial Day. You don't have to go on the day of the holiday itself; you will almost certainly have all weekend
I just went to Habitat for Humanity on Labor Day. I was going to pick up a bookcase for the radical community center I joined, which wanted to make a lending library. Now, I have a lot of disability shit that limit my ability to protest in person or make it to meetings quite often, but you know what I can do? Furniture and books.
So, anyway, I got an entire solid, good quality, iirc real wood bookcase for $30. Probably, these days, would have cost at least $200 new. A few scratches in the paint, sure, but it's black, so all I need is a sharpie and it's good as new. Better than new, with enshittification these days!!! When's the last time you bought something new that was good quality??? That you could KNOW wouldn't immediately break??? And!! It saves furniture from the landfill while supporting Habitat for Humanity, an awesome nonprofit that helps build and improve affordable housing for low-income and marginalized people/families and has had their bank accounts frozen by the Trump administration for their climate advocacy (x, x) while furthering circular and reuse-based economies
Habitat for Humanity, on Labor Day weekend, had 10 different couches - real, genuine, solid quality couches - for literally $20 each
Having enough of this kind of knowledge can make you Incredibly powerful
And these skills are only gonna get a hell of a lot more valuable in the coming years, and as we transition to a sustainable future
Jennifer's body (2009) dr. Karyn Kusama
I will wait for you every time.
Every time.
❝ I’m limited. Just look at me. ❞
HOUSE OF THE DRAGON (2022 - )