queer eye (1x02): saving sasquatch
that’s easily a Jesus cameo
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if i look back, i am lost
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@sevenstribe
queer eye (1x02): saving sasquatch
that’s easily a Jesus cameo
me: yeah im really tough
me: [gets scared by text notifications when they’re too loud]
me: [easily startled when people tap me on the shoulder]
me: [cries under any sort of pressure ever]
me: [cries when anyone raises their voice higher than their average volume]
me: so tough
Fresh Fish from Port Sudan. Masha'Allah
Where are all of my thick babies ? 💚🧡 i wanna see y’all ! 🗣
Yoooooo 😩😩 she is gorgeous lawddddd
•:: R I S E ::• #TBT #BrujaHands Night Becomes Day Easy When Your With A Bestie #SunriseSelfies (at Kalorama, Washington, D.C.)
Let’s help a brother out and spread this so he can get more customers ✊🏾✊🏾
Twitter Instagram Etsy
actual factuals
this is from an Afro-Latina owned shop btw if anyone’s willing to cop
When they push the other girls….I LIVED!!!!!
girlfriends
when tf this happen?
I’ll be so pissed lol
Issa Rae | Hannah Magazine
Oh she flexin
A suspicious object, Julia Petrova (because)
Brooklyn’s Curlfest celebrates natural hair during 4th annual beauty festival
It was a steaming hot Saturday in Prospect Park, but the #BlackGirlMagic was even hotter as thousands of women ascended on the fourth annual Curlfest, the largest natural beauty festival in the U.S. From waist-length braids to decorative butterflies nestled in afros, the women stunned from their crowns to their sandaled toes.
The yearly event is produced by the five women of Curly Girl Collective, an experiential marketing group that specializes in multicultural beauty. The event’s mission is to create a space of celebration for women of color to celebrate their locs, afros and twist-outs. “Curlfest was founded on the idea of you all needing to be celebrated,” Tracey Coleman, director of events, said at the press conference as she pointed to the crowd. “If you look around, and you see images of beauty, they don’t necessarily look like us.”
Coleman was dressed in an Ankara jumpsuit with oversized earrings made of stitched leather and wore her hair in a puffed afro. When asked about the friction within the natural-hair movement of “good” hair versus “bad” hair, Coleman didn’t hesitate. “The great thing about the movement now is that barrier is being broken down; there’s no good hair and there’s no bad hair,” Coleman said in an interview with Mic. “Healthy hair is what’s good, so that’s what we’re here to promote.” Read more. (7/17/2017 3:00 PM)
Waiting for the End of the World