Ann Demeulemeester for HF Magazine (2001) Photography: Moto Schnabel
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art blog(derogatory)

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
One Nice Bug Per Day
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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i don't do bad sauce passes

Kaledo Art

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@sagittariidae
Ann Demeulemeester for HF Magazine (2001) Photography: Moto Schnabel
Paul van Riel - Sayoko Yamaguchi at Thierry Mugler S/S RTW (1982)
[ Illustration by Virginia Greene of three Stephens Island wrens alongside a cat’s trackway. ]
“Meanwhile, the cat population in Stephens Island grew and they began to kill the birds in alarming numbers. The matter was made worse by the fact that the wren was flightless, who could only run low on the ground or hop from branch to branch. The bird was originally found all over New Zealand, but predators such as the Polynesian rat killed off nearly the entire population except for a small colony on Stephens Island. The birds probably migrated to this isolated island during the last glaciation when it was connected to the mainland. When the sea level rose, Stephens Island became an isolated safe heaven with no natural predators, until David Lyall arrived with his cat.
By February 1895, less than a year since Tibbles brought the first specimen, the wren had become impossible to be found. That same month Lyall wrote regrettably to Walter Buller that “the cats have become wild and are making sad havoc among all the birds.” By then, the bird was seen alive only twice.”
- Excerpt from “How A Single Cat Hunted to Extinction The Entire Species of Stephens Island Wren” by Kaushik Patowary.
Worries by Hi Brian Vu on Flickr.
Green bee-eaters (Merops orientalis) in India
Govindraj
Yellowtail Coris - Coris gaimard
Brooch, 1870.
Paphiopedilum lowii
Syn.: Cypripedium lowii; Cordula lowii
June 25, 2020
Pholisma sonorae is a parasitic plant in the same family as the forget-me-not (Boraginaceae) which grows in the Sonoran desert. It only emerges from the ground to flower. Like some other subterranean parasitic plants, it only emerges above ground to flower. The fact that the flowering shoots resemble mushrooms seems like a pretty good example of convergent evolution!
(via)
Pholisma sonorae is an imperiled species now, ranked G2 currently. However, in the past it was used as food by native peoples of the Sonoran desert, which is reflected in its common name: sand food. The roots could be boiled and eaten, but as it is now rare, it is no longer used in this way.
I love her :(
https://www.instagram.com/p/BqatYF5ntAU/
QUÉ NO SALGA LA LUNA (cap. 2: Boda)
Philip Treacy Haute Couture F/W 2001
Bimpe for Stylist France, ph. Synchrodogs
Styled by Guillaume Boulez, hair by Nicolas Jurnjack, makeup by Min Kim
Stelis pachyphyta
October 21, 2018
Wonderland Magazine