Brooch - Dancing nymphs in a frame of bats ca. 1902-03.
Jeweler: René Lalique
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from South Korea

seen from Mexico
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Ireland
seen from Netherlands
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
Brooch - Dancing nymphs in a frame of bats ca. 1902-03.
Jeweler: René Lalique
Carved Artwork, Loule Salt Mine
Frank Stella. from the Circuit Series :Talladega Three III, 1983.
relief & woodcut on handmade hand-cut paper
Hey everyone! I forgot to post this when I got it because I'm bad at email but:
Dear Stranger Things Queer Community,
On behalf of Rainbow Railroad, I am reaching out to give our sincerest thanks to the Hellfire Zine: Dungeons Dragons & Demobats Contributors and the Stranger Things queer community for their generous gift.
As a part of our community, your support is instrumental in moving forward Rainbow Railroad’s mission to help at-risk LGBTQI+ people get to safety worldwide. We are so grateful to count you in as a supporter and champion of our cause.
This year, we have a lot on our plate - we'll be moving 800 refugees to safety, including 600 Afghans, and we'll assist thousands more through cash assistance, our work with our partners on the ground, and our private sponsorship programs in the U.S. and Canada. We are also monitoring the situation in Uganda, where members of the LGBTQI+ are facing more violence and discrimination than ever after the Ugandan government passed an Anti-LGBTQI+ law a few weeks ago, further criminalizing the community. Requests for help from Uganda have already dramatically increased, as we've received over 1,000 requests for help in 2023, compared to around 300 in all of 2022.
Your donation will support this important work - empowering LGBTQI+ people to find safety and live authentically with integrity. We could only do our work with community members like yourselves.
Thank you again for your support. Our staff, board, volunteers, and the individuals Rainbow Railroad support are truly grateful. Please don't hesitate to reach out if you have any questions about our work or are interested in continuing to partner with our organization.
Regards, Brittany Skerritt (she/they) Senior Development Officer, Community Giving Rainbow Railroad
Quakers running a Citizens Advice Bureau to offer aid and support in Britain during the First World War
Camps for Trans-Canada highway workers, all of whom were unemployed men on relief in Ontario forced to build roads for their meagre welfare. All from the Toronto Star, issues of September 26, September 12 and October 2, 1931.
Notably these photos have all been produced from negatives that were painted or retouched for publication.
Toronto Public Library, Toronto Star Photograph Archive.
1) One of the box-like buildings of frame and tarpaper. A canvas top or tent will be placed over this to complete it. TSPA_0018484F.
2) Trans-Canada highway camps to house workers on the North Bay-Pembroke section of the Ontario route are nearing completion. TSPA_0018482F
3) Forerunners of Highway camps; This board-walled tent camp is typical of those which probably will be built along the northern Ontario route of the trans-Canada highway to house the workers erecting buildings of a more substantial type for the road-workers. TSPA_0018481F.
4) Workmen busy on construction of shacks in one of the camps along North Bay-Mattawa section of trans-Canada highway; to where some of Toronto jobless have gone. TSPA_0018486F
Door Panel, Yoruba Culture by Master of Ikerre (active c. 1900-1914), late 1800s, High Relief, carved in Wood, 147.955 x 71.1200 cm, Denver Art Museum.
Ayyub and Arif were headed to pick up Alphonso mangoes from a farmer who was selling directly to housing societies. Near the Kopar Khairane slum (in New Mumbai), they saw a child playing alone in the middle of the road. Ayyub got out of the car to investigate. “His mother said he’s happy, let him be. We have nothing to eat. If he sits at home he will only bother me." The woman’s husband was a municipal sewage cleaner who had lost his job and her last meal was a banana she had eaten the previous day. One thing led to another and, in seven days, Ayyub raised ₹1.25 crore on Ketto. She put out a call for relief workers on Twitter; one gent showed up with his white Mercedes and volunteered to chauffeur the team; a computer shop in Dharavi doubled up as a place to store food supplies. When the money ran out, they raised another ₹50 lakh. They used the money to send migrant workers back home, to fund emergency medical procedures, buy oxygen cylinders and tarpaulin for flood-prone regions. They distributed 13kg packets of ration to 60,000 families across five states, she says. “The relief work kept me sane," she says. “I was out every day."
Priya Ramani, 'The impossible Rana Ayyub', Livemint