Iāve got a lot of open windows.
AnasAbdin
trying on a metaphor
d e v o n
i don't do bad sauce passes

pixel skylines
šŖ¼

shark vs the universe
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
ojovivo

izzy's playlists!
Today's Document

Janaina Medeiros

romaā

Origami Around

Discoholic šŖ©

blake kathryn

if i look back, i am lost
Not today Justin
todays bird
YOU ARE THE REASON
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@willfightforteeth
Iāve got a lot of open windows.
Saw these in the photo bin at an antique store and thought of @catsofyore. Lady at the register said guy on the left is hot. ~ maāam, heās holding a cat.
The Steamboat Osceola on the Ocklawaha River in 1886, taken by George Barker.
Historical people of the past arenāt just characters, they arenāt just figures in books- those people actually walked the earth, they lived, they breathed, they had a favorite book, they had ambitions, they smelled the flowers, they saw the colors in the sky. They arenāt just characters, they were actual people with problems, emotions and flaws. They werenāt perfect, but they still mean the whole world to some of us.
These people have always felt nearby, more so when I was studying history in an academic setting and not just during fragments of free time. I want that back, but without the pressure of school. I miss getting dizzy off microfilm.
I just deleted the last of my social media accounts, which makes this blog my only corner of the internet. Hopefully, this helps reduce the unhelpful distractions impeding my writing hobby AND consolidates my writing inspo and ~actual writing in one space. Any thoughts on social media platforms and their usefulness for writers?
(Sand Island Lighthouse)
A different angle on āterror at sea,ā which I unintentionally came upon last weekend. A man on our boat suggested I look up the āthree story farmhouseā that once stood at the base of the light. All thatās left now is the lighthouse and a small platform made of rocks.
Siegfried Herford and George Mallory at Pen y Pass. Another one for the creativity board. And maybe one day, Iāll add the photos from Sandy Irvineās camera (it still exists, preserved inside an ice block. change my mind)
i genuinely think boats are such good places to set a story because it automatically gives you a set of really interesting circumstances -- boats are transitory, you are not meant to stay on them forever, there is an automatic assumption of ending up somewhere different from where you started...characters are forced into close proximity, stakes are higher, etc. boats also just look cool, so that's always a plus
Iāve had this photo of a photo on my phone for almost a year. Two days ago, I returned to the antique store and bought the damn thing. Any thoughts on the shipās identity? Hard to tell, I know.
Update: absolutely zero luck determining this shipās true identity, despite going back for the other photos in the collection. Lost at sea indeed.
some of my favorite online resources for nautical/maritime/age of sail things - this is a longish post full of links and i spent a bit of time putting it together from my various bookmarks and collections!! please enjoy!
this blog (christine demerchant) and its many lists of terms and informative pages, for example: sails & rigs & sailing, hull & construction terms, anchors & anchorage, types of boats & ships, points of sail - at the bottom of every page there is a list of books on the topic as well!! this blog is INVALUABLE and has basically everything, and if it doesn't have something it certainly has a link to another blog or a book that has what you need. there's also lot of interesting articles about the author's adventures in making her own sails and building boats and experimenting with sailing. the site is a little difficult to navigate but the information on it is incredible and all very experience-based!!
there's also this blog (roland's model ship building) which is SUCH a delight - it is mostly model ships as the name would suggest but it is an incredibly close look at the little complicated parts of ships and a great resource for the more "how does this look" aspect if a little less "how does this work". my favorite page is the process of building model HMS surprise - it's SO fascinating and even just a quick look through makes visualizing and understanding the physics of it all easier. this in particular is a very good drawing resource for tall ships!
the ever-famous shipindex.org is a completely invaluable resource as well. pretty much anything you want to know about a specific ship can be found here, or at least it makes a spectacular jumping-off point!
another famous resource is falconer's marine dictionary, or: "A New Universal Dictionary of the Marine; Being a Copious Explanation of the Technical Terms and Phrases Usually Employed in the Construction, Equipment, Machinery, Movements, and Military, as Well as Naval, Operations of Ships: with Such Parts of Astronomy, and Navigation, as Will be Found Useful to Practical Navigators" by william falconer and expanded by william burney - the whole text is here online but it can be a little hard to read and understand so i would supplement with the other resources here!
there is also the oxford companion to ships and the sea which i do not have a copy of nor do i have online access to the full text, BUT you can search and find keywords and it will show you excerpts which is surprisingly helpful!! especially good if you don't have time to read the whole dictionary trying to find one specific term.
in the same vein is the oxford encyclopedia of maritime history - same deal as the above and i do not have access to the full text but this is SO useful for looking up specific people and places and ships and battles and such!!! there's TONS of information in this one.
also, a super interesting primary source: digital collections of midshipmen's letters and journals in the united states naval academy!! these are hefty, each link contains a ton of stuff:
Richard Mueller Nixon Letters (1926-1930)
Henry Mylin Keiffer Scrapbook (1907-1911) (one of my favorites of all time, absolutely worth at least a cursory glance)
John Porter Merrell Johnston Letters (1932-1937)
William Frederick Durand U.S.S. Mayflower journal of practice cruise (1879)
Roscoe C. Bulmer Journal (1894-1896)
Josiah G. Beckwith Letters (1853-1855)
this is not my whole collection but it is a fantastic set of jumping-off points and i tried to include the widest & most general databases that i could. if you have a great online resource to add please let me know, and if you have book recommendations i would appreciate those too!!!
Itās been a pirate summer for me thanks to discovering Black Sails on Tubi. But within the last week, the season shifted to the summer of heretofore unimaginable terror at sea. Hoping to work these two themes into a writing project, but how to do so without coming off cliche or cheesy?