(Source: dalescrusades, via loving-that-officey-feel)
(Source: dalescrusades, via loving-that-officey-feel)
IMG_6883.jpg on Flickr.
Yellow Leaves in the Fog by SunnyDazzled on Flickr.
(via rosebiar)
(Source: chujo-hime, via sakuratsukikage)
Celestial clockwork globe. 1579, Vienna, Austria.
Source: Met Museum
(Source: travellinganachronism, via androphilia)
That day, she was amazed to discover that when he was saying “As you wish”, what he meant was, “I love you.” And even more amazing was the day she realized she truly loved him back.
(via glorfindel)
via NYPL
Readers and reading were sources of constant interest to artists in the Romantic period. The young woman shown here holds Matthew Gregory Lewis’s “terror-gothic” The Monk (1796). A phantasmagoria of murder, suicide, corruption, and incest, it is one of the few novels for which nineteenth-century disapproval might still seem justified, and it was blamed for considerable moral degradation. The subject of Comfort heats her posterior along with her imagination.
There ain’t nothin’ feel so good as a warm butt with a phantasmagoria
Harry Potter by Abigail Larson, on Tumblr
(Source: sosuperawesome, via moseisleywelcomingcommittee)
(Source: lamarionnette, via fairytalesandfrills)
(Source: tumblr.com, via eldritchscreech)
He Wins Who Waits
H.J. Ford
Andrew Lang, The Olive Fairy Book
(via moncabinetdecuriosites)
Condom commercial written and directed by a woman. Condoms don’t need to be sexy, we just need to know that they’ll work! Fucking brilliant.
this is awesome
A++++
(via gloomybears)
LIFE: Death Valley Fliers. Photo by John Florea, 1944.
(via cheeseburgerdanvers)