styofa doing anything
Jules of Nature
Sweet Seals For You, Always
we're not kids anymore.

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
🪼
Misplaced Lens Cap
taylor price
almost home
Game of Thrones Daily

pixel skylines
NASA

JVL
dirt enthusiast

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
trying on a metaphor
h
todays bird

blake kathryn

seen from United States

seen from Honduras
seen from Pakistan
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from Chile

seen from Malaysia
seen from Sri Lanka
seen from Finland
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Israel
seen from United States

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seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Malaysia
@sugarkittytitty
Rafaella Consentino photographed by Isabella Lombardini
when I get asked what I bring to the table
All men cheat so marry the richest one
I got two men to pay for my place for a year upfront so I’m pocketing half of it. Truly iconic
👏👏👏
jane austen really just repeatedly said “the sexiest thing a man can be is kind, selfless, attentive and honest about his feelings” and, as always, she was correct every single time
Mood
High Class Styling Tips
• Dress modestly: if you want to stand out from the rest, you must go against the social norms of the time, ironically, this aligns with modestly perfectly. While our society focuses on praising the displaying of skin and provocative outfits, in order to be truly elegant you must learn to see the beauty in embellishing yourself in more conservative, yet tasteful and of great quality clothing. Opt for pieces that will flatter your silhouette, depict delicate embroidery, and enhance your feminity in a charming manner, modest doesn't have to mean bland or unflattering, quite the opposite actually:
• Choose the right color scheme: elegance isn't boastful, when choosing the type of hues for your particular look, pay close attention to the way that such colors compliment your complexion, how they combine with each other, and whether the colors enhance your dainty and elegant image, or not. Safe bets are usually nudes, monochromatic outfits & all black/white looks. When going for an all white outfit, for example, choose a shade that is more sophisticated such as ivory, steam, or white dove, as examples:
• Avoid exaggerated accessories: these include extra high heels, extravagant glasses or jewelry. You should instead opt for tasteful yet striking pieces. Heels should be of moderate length, and your entire choice of accessories should serve as complimentary for your outfit, not be the main focus of your outfit:
• Do not be overbearing with perfume: much like the previous point, perfume should enhance your overall presence and it's an essential part of a high class lady's grooming, but too much of a good thing can turn sour. With your perfumes be mindful of the places you are visiting and choose the type of scent that not only fits that environment better, but also spray just enough for it to be pleasantly felt, without giving a headache to those around you.
• Maintain your nails and overall body properly kept: a woman that is seen with her nails properly styled with smooth skin that is moisturized will let others know immediately that she is high maintenance and her sense of self worth is high because she ensures her body is properly polished and groomed. Similar to the color for your clothing, make sure your nail polish is consistent with the color pattern of the outfit you are wearing. Avoid overly long nails, nails that are falling off or showing signs of major wear, colors and patterns that are extravagant, etc. Colors like white are safe bets, but depending on your skin tone more hold colors like yellow or pink can suit you better as well:
NORMANI Savage X Fenty (2020)
Here is thing I learned when I was 29, which I now give away for free: If you want to do a thing, do it now, or as soon as feasible. Because there might not be a later. If it is a complicated or expensive or hard thing that takes many stages or has a steep learning curve, start working on the parts you can work on while you can work on them, then move on to the next thing. Accept that there will be a lot of failures along the way, and that you can come back from nearly any mistake that doesn’t involve making a left turn in front of an oncoming semi. Concentrate on yourself and what you can do, and don’t rely on other people to fix things for you, even though you might love them or they you. (This doesn’t mean you can’t love friends or family or partners. Friends and family and partners, in the long run, are the thing other than Useful Work and Adventures that make life worthwhile. Well, all that, and a really nice coffee and tea kit in the kitchen and the skill to use it. But that last thing isn’t terribly expensive unless you make it be.) But to succeed at a thing–a job, a relationship–in the long term, the thing is: You Must Commit, even though commitment is scary. And commitment is scary because once you’re in you’re in. It’s not bobbing around close to the shore, paddling with your feet. It’s both feet and swimming as hard as you can out where the rip currents and the sharks are, where the water turns blue. You can’t hold back because you’re afraid of getting hurt: you have to accept that you are going to get hurt, and put your hand in the fire of your own free will. It’s like climbing. You can make sure you’ve got good ropes and a belayer you trust (you SHOULD make sure you have good ropes and a belayer you trust!), but there’s moves you can’t make unless you’re willing to risk falling. I’m not saying follow your bliss off a cliff, in other words: part of being prepared and committed is having the right kit, whether it’s money in the bank for the lean times when starting off as a freelancer, or a partner who supports your work, or being young enough that starving in a cold room for a few years with pneumonia is romantic (I have the T-shirt!). That’s why it’s scary. It’s scary because you are taking an actual chance. But: things don’t work out the way you want them to if you just kind of drift along seeing what will happen. Nice things might happen! …but they didn’t, for me. Basically, what I figured out was that I had to be a protagonist if I wanted anything to happen, and part of being a protagonist was accepting that I might fail. And then have to deal with that failure. And that if I didn’t do it I would more or less inevitably fail, but I could pretend to myself that it wasn’t because I wasn’t good enough and that I didn’t know why. Seeking success, in other words, meant letting go of a layer of ego defense. This realization directly led to me having the career I always wanted, and doing pretty well at it. It also led to me having the best relationship of my life. I wish I’d learned it when I was sixteen, rather than twenty-nine, but I had some things I had to work through first.
So that thing you want to do? Assuming it’s not illegal or immediately fatal? Do it now.
not wearing a labcoat so the other scientists know im a whore
only wearing a labcoat so the other scientists know i’m a whore
“If you inherently long for something, become it first. If you want gardens, become the gardener. If you want love, embody love. If you want mental stimulation, change the conversation. If you want peace, exude calmness. If you want to fill your world with artists, begin to paint. If you want to be valued, respect your own time. If you want to live ecstatically, find the ecstasy within yourself. This is how to draw it in, day by day, inch by inch.”
— Victoria Erickson (via luna—belle)