I can't believe the guy who played Giles from Buffy died so sad 💔
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Love Begins
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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

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Sweet Seals For You, Always
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"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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@tpbrachel
I can't believe the guy who played Giles from Buffy died so sad 💔
My boyfriend's been binge watching season 8-9 of Trailer Park Boys all day lol
Living on the water. Photo by @ben_steeman 🏠🚣♀️ check out his awesome shots! #germandrones ⠀ ↟ www.germandrones.eu (hier: Netherlands) https://www.instagram.com/p/B5n1dGqh_ll/?igshid=156w5zw627sxx
M104, Sombrero Galaxy
NGC 2170, Angel
(via ca14b26fb018d5449b83e0c9e0f716f6.jpg (896×1344))
This was really fun to draw
⋆₊˚⊹౨ৎ˚.
⋆₊˚⊹౨ৎ˚.
Golden Sunrise With Mountains
Lady gaga and the outfits the women wore were probably the only good things about devil wears prada 2 lol
Star Wars in NGC 664 - April 18th, 1998.
"Long ago in a galaxy far, far away, locked in their final desperate struggle against the force of gravity...two stars exploded! Stellar explosions - supernovae - are among the most powerful events in the Universe, estimated to release an equivalent energy of up to 1 million trillion trillion (1 followed by 30 zeros) megatons of TNT. After the explosion, an expanding supernova envelope is observed to brighten over a period of days to a maximum light output, which rivals that of an entire galaxy before fading from view over the following months. Triggered by the collapsing core of a massive star or the nuclear demise of a white dwarf, supernovae occur in average spiral galaxies only about once every 25-100 years. But an observation of NGC 664, a spiral galaxy about 300 million light-years distant, captured a rare and colourful performance - two supernovae from the same galaxy. In this monitoring exposure, the two supernovae, one reddish yellow and one blue, form a close pair just below the image center (to the right of the galaxy nucleus). The colour difference is due to temperature - blue is hotter."