GET READY FOR SPACE CAMP

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I don’t know what this is from but

(via thetigerbeat)

— 43 minutes ago with 33 notes
THESE ARE ACTUALLY GOOD QUESTIONS. Send me a number.

falseutopia:

1. Three things I want to say to three different people.
2. One of my insecurities.
3. What turns me on.
4. One of my bad habits.
5. Who I wish I could be.
6. Where I want to be right now.
7. The last thing I ate.
8. Sexiest person that comes to my mind immediately.
9. What song I’m currently listening to.
10. The last time I cried and why.
11. Something I’m excited about.
12. 5 things I like about myself and 5 things I dislike about myself.
13. Three things I want right now.

(Source: l-abattoir, via dredsina)

— 1 hour ago with 76165 notes

thedismembermentflan:

I wish I had as much political power as a fetus.

(Source: jpegartifacts, via ghosthustler)

— 1 hour ago with 2158 notes
mydaguerreotypeboyfriend:

Harry Houdini, age 25, 1899. Because…well, you know. Chains.

mydaguerreotypeboyfriend:

Harry Houdini, age 25, 1899. Because…well, you know. Chains.

— 2 hours ago with 658 notes
#always reblog 
vashti:


“Lovers’ eye”, eye miniature on ivory, c. 1830s. Hand-painted miniature of a left hazel eye on ivory in heart-shaped pendant.
Eye miniatures or Lovers’ eyes were Georgian miniatures, normally watercolour on ivory, depicting the eye or eyes of a spouse, loved one or child. These were usually commissioned for sentimental reasons and were often worn as bracelets, brooches, pendants or rings with richly decorated frames, serving the same emotional need as lockets hiding portraits or locks of hair. This fad started in the late 1700s.
Eye miniatures are believed to have originated when the Prince of Wales (later George IV) felt the need to send the widow Maria Fitzherbert a token of his love. This gesture and the romance that went with it, was frowned upon by the court, so that a miniaturist was employed to paint only the eye and thereby preserve anonymity and decorum.

vashti:

“Lovers’ eye”, eye miniature on ivory, c. 1830s. Hand-painted miniature of a left hazel eye on ivory in heart-shaped pendant.

Eye miniatures or Lovers’ eyes were Georgian miniatures, normally watercolour on ivory, depicting the eye or eyes of a spouse, loved one or child. These were usually commissioned for sentimental reasons and were often worn as bracelets, brooches, pendants or rings with richly decorated frames, serving the same emotional need as lockets hiding portraits or locks of hair. This fad started in the late 1700s.

Eye miniatures are believed to have originated when the Prince of Wales (later George IV) felt the need to send the widow Maria Fitzherbert a token of his love. This gesture and the romance that went with it, was frowned upon by the court, so that a miniaturist was employed to paint only the eye and thereby preserve anonymity and decorum.

(Source: a-l-ancien-regime, via whiskersonkittens)

— 7 hours ago with 4349 notes