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Today's Document
One Nice Bug Per Day
Cosimo Galluzzi
d e v o n
KIROKAZE
sheepfilms
DEAR READER
dirt enthusiast
Peter Solarz
art blog(derogatory)
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

tannertan36
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

izzy's playlists!

Love Begins
Show & Tell
almost home
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Malaysia
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@water-shape
The Wire 451. Cover photography by Garrett Grove.
Illustration of Satan (Devilman) by Takeshi Obata. This drawing was included in the art book ‘Illustrations of Devilman’ published in 1999 by Kodansha, as part of an event that began in 1996 to honor Devilman creator Go Nagai. Famous illustrators and artists were invited to submit fan art of Devilman and this was Obata’s submission [press link in the source]. Of note, Obata says in How to Read that the design of L from Death Note was partially inspired by Akira Fudou in Devilman, particularly L’s eye bags.
dj interior semiotics - chop suey bootleg
@jyoucyo
http://kinet.media/movies/worlds
Worlds by Isaac Goes
Produced by Isiah Medina
Original Score and Sound Mix by James Emrick
Additional Music and Sound Effects by Lyla Perry
Featuring Music from 2403 by sad_rave
A Kinet Media / Quantity Cinema Co-production
Maison Margiela: Women’s jacket made with vintage summer sandals, 2006.
ARCHIVE.pdf: Maison Margiela ‘Cream Issue 09, 2008′ Fashion Book Scan
(pinkpantheress)
Solange | Cranes In The Sky | A Seat At The Table
I tried to work it away But that just made me even sadder I tried to keep myself busy I ran around in circles Think I made myself dizzy I slept it away, I sexed it away I read it away
Purloined from Genius:
“Cranes in the Sky” describes Solange’s attempts at avoiding painful feelings. While asked by her sister Beyonce about the meaning of the song in Interview magazine, she explained:
“Cranes in the Sky” is actually a song that I wrote eight years ago. It’s the only song on the album that I wrote independently of the record, and it was a really rough time. I know you remember that time. I was just coming out of my relationship with Julez’s father. We were junior high school sweethearts, and so much of your identity in junior high is built on who you’re with. You see the world through the lens of how you identify and have been identified at that time. So I really had to take a look at myself, outside of being a mother and a wife, and internalize all of these emotions that I had been feeling through that transition. I was working through a lot of challenges at every angle of my life, and a lot of self-doubt, a lot of pity-partying. And I think every woman in her twenties has been there—where it feels like no matter what you are doing to fight through the thing that is holding you back, nothing can fill that void. I used to write and record a lot in Miami during that time, when there was a real estate boom in America, and developers were developing all of this new property. There was a new condo going up every ten feet. You recorded a lot there as well, and I think we experienced Miami as a place of refuge and peace. We weren’t out there wilin’ out and partying. I remember looking up and seeing all of these cranes in the sky. They were so heavy and such an eyesore, and not what I identified with peace and refuge. I remember thinking of it as an analogy for my transition—this idea of building up, up, up that was going on in our country at the time, all of this excessive building, and not really dealing with what was in front of us. And we all know how that ended. That crashed and burned. It was a catastrophe. And that line came to me because it felt so indicative of what was going on in my life as well. And, eight years later, it’s really interesting that now, here we are again, not seeing what’s happening in our country, not wanting to put into perspective all of these ugly things that are staring us in the face.
Silent Hill 2 by Punchy in 50:14 & arrowhead (yanone) from The Met collection, gouache on paper
Margiela…