Hi! I'm Boque.
Welcome to my main blog.
âź
âź
@boquecrafts --- art (attempts) blog.
#boquespost --- my posts.
#oui-oui-boquette --- my posts in French / mes posts en français.
âź
âź
About me:
One Nice Bug Per Day
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

shark vs the universe
wallacepolsom

Product Placement
dirt enthusiast

â

Kaledo Art
sheepfilms

he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
AnasAbdin
tumblr dot com
almost home

Origami Around

oozey mess
Three Goblin Art
hello vonnie
occasionally subtle

seen from Bolivia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Morocco

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Japan
@boqueboque
Hi! I'm Boque.
Welcome to my main blog.
âź
âź
@boquecrafts --- art (attempts) blog.
#boquespost --- my posts.
#oui-oui-boquette --- my posts in French / mes posts en français.
âź
âź
About me:

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
as a pink lover. The ""universal""" hatred of the color pink by young girls is due to the heavy expectation of femininity forced on them. It is an expression of frustration at gender roles. It is not internalized misogyny. No you will not inevitably start liking pink as an adult and if you do that is not healing your inner divine feminine or whatever we're saying now. Its a color. đđ
Sonic the Hellhound.
Learning colorwork at my desk.
2-YEAR CHEDDAR
from GRAFTON VILLAGE
I usually try to review cheeses virginally - that is, ones that Iâve never had before. In this case, this is a cheddar Iâve had many times before. But I couldnât leave it off the blog, what with its obvious appeal to leather and rubber fetishists.
As far as cheddars go, Graftonâs 2-year aged isnât going to shock you. Itâs mild, light on the salt, with a slightly sweet and grassy flavour. Itâs got a nice texture. Itâs dense, more moist than I expected, and smooth.
So what is the deal with the gummi suit on this cheese anyway? Well, cheese has obviously been around a lot longer than fridges. Fresh cheeses like mozzarella are too moist to last very long outside of a cold place (bacteria and fungi do so love damp places), though I donât think anyone was too mad about eating that stuff quickly. But cheeses that have been aged (and dried) more have some more preservation options, which is where cheese wax comes in. The wax is a physical barrier, stopping fungal spores from landing, and also blocks moisture and air, making the cheese a pretty unfriendly place to grow. Even drier cheeses can be bandaged in cheesecloth and then slathered in lard to preserve them while allowing some ventilation.
I gotta admit: hot wax isnât really my thing. But cheesecloth bondage and grease⊠it has potential.
this site used to be awesome

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Interruption du programme habituel pour parler de Marjane Satrapi. Je ne sais pas si vous avez vu passer l'info, mais elle est décédée aujourd'hui.
Je connais pas assez la madame et je prĂ©tends pas pouvoir dresser un portrait convenable donc je veux simplement partager avec vous quelques unes des Ćuvres que je connais et si vous en avez envie, vous pouvez rĂ©agir Ă ce post pour partager un souvenir, une recommandation etc.
En premier, Persepolis Ă©videmment. J'avais 17 ans quand on m'a offert l'intĂ©gral en BD et j'avais adorĂ©. Je vais pas m'Ă©tendre sur cette Ćuvre que beaucoup de gens connaissent sĂ»rement. Simplement, si vous ne l'avez jamais lu, foncez. C'est un excellent moyen de dĂ©couvrir cette autrice/dessinatrice, son univers et son Ă©criture. Et si vous aimez pas trop lire, il existe une adaptation animĂ©e. Je ne l'ai pas vue donc je peux pas en dire grand chose mais il a Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ© par Marjane Satrapi elle-mĂȘme donc je pense que ça doit ĂȘtre trĂšs fidĂšle Ă l'Ćuvre d'origine.
The Voices*. Si vous ne connaissez pas, rendez-vous service et voyez-le, il est hilarant. Le casting est trĂšs chouette : on a Ryan Reynolds, Anna Kendrick et Gemma Arterton. Si vous ĂȘtes Ă l'aise avec l'anglais, je vous recommande la VO juste pour profiter des voix du chat et du chien doublĂ©s par Reynolds.
*attention quand mĂȘme, c'est sanglant et ça aborde des sujets difficiles donc renseignez-vous avant de le regarder, au cas oĂč.
Et ça sera tout car j'ai malheureusement procrastinĂ©, mon tome de Femme vie libertĂ© est en train de prendre la poussiĂšre, donc je ne peux pas en parler ici ; et mĂȘme si j'avais Ă©tĂ© intriguĂ©e par Poulet aux prunes (Ă cause de son titre) je ne l'ai toujours pas achetĂ©/lu.
Lisez aussi Poulet aux Prunes et Broderies, c'est magnifique, mĂȘme si Poulet aux Prunes est une lecture que j'ai trouvĂ© difficile, le thĂšme Ă©tant autour du suicide... Marjane est partie comme son personnage, Nasser, de tristesse
đ§Š My first striped socks
âą Yarn: PINGO MYSOCKS - Pingouin (colours: 'vert anisade' + 'vert') âą Needle size: 2.5 mm
The heel flap was made in the Eye of Partridge stitch (first time knitting this stitch too!).
Had some trouble correctly positioning the loose threads in-between stripes at first, but I eventually managed to get it right (? I hope so đ )
Front // inside
Hey guys The Weather & Climate Livestream is back! From their youtube description: "50 hours of weather and climate science from Monday, June 1st to Wednesday, June 3rd, brought to you by 100+ US meteorologists and climate scientists whose research is at risk due to proposed budget cuts, overhaul of federal grantmaking rules, and attacks on the National Center for Atmospheric Research. As you are tuning into our stream-a-thon, we encourage you to talk to your friends, family, and representatives about what you are learning! Visit https://wclivestream.com/call/ to help us #saveamericasforecasts." From their website: "Whether it's tomorrow's temperatures or the sea level in fifty years, Americans need to plan for our futures. For generations, the US government has invested in the science that helps us do so, building one of the greatest meteorology and climate science communities in the world.
Now that science is under threat. Missing observations and shuttered labs, especially the threatened dismantling of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, are making life more dangerous and expensive for Americans. Last year, 180,000 people watched meteorologists and climate scientists from across America speak for 100 hours to draw attention to federal funding cuts to American science. The 2025 Livestream resulted in 30,000 calls to Congress." Please show them some support just like last year! You can also help them with acting to protect NCAR here! They only have 56 letters at the moment!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Ken was created from Barbieâs rib
has anyone considered that it was probably her house too. where else was she supposed to put her chintz?
I was feeling agitated and artblocked yesterday so I decided to give my brain a rest by watching TV and then the next thing I knew these were in front of me
Un jour de retard mais c'est parce-qu'il fallait qu'ils s'évadent, 'comprenez.
Food history has been so sanitized by the demonization of carbs. âOur ancestors only had fruits and veggies they didnât have all these refined carbsâ our ancestors drank beer 25/8 because the water was bad. Our ancestors drizzled honey on shit ever since we knew it existed. Weâve been making bread for our entire recorded history. Itâs true that bleached sugars specifically are a new thing but high glycemic carbs are not new at all, weâve been consuming them for thousands of years
Quick correction bc I see this myth everywhere.
People drank beer & fruit wine 25/8 because it was high in calories and also tasty and pretty cheap/easy to make in bulk.
IT WAS NOT USED TO REPLACE OR SANITIZE WATER! THEIR WATER WAS NOT BAD!
The alcohol content in beer/wine back then was too low to actually sanitize anything effectively, and beer/wine only lasts for 6 months (usually less) even while still sealed in a cask, due to oxidization. Oxidation turns fermented liquids into vinegar. Wine and beer wasnât meant for long-term storage.
This is great, because vinegar is the great preserver! VINEGAR is what people used to store their foods long-term, along with SALT and DRYING and SMOKING.
âPicklingâ can be done with pure vinegar if you donât have any expensive salt around, and vinegar can be made by fermenting any fruit or grain with wild yeast! If youâre lucky, you can also get wine/beer treats out of it on the way.
Circling back around: beer/wine was NEVER a replacement for water. Humans have been drinking from ground springs, wells, rainwater, and clear running water since our ape ancestors got the instinct to avoid stagnant pools.
If you didnât have immediate access to a source of clean water, you didnât fucking build a town there!
Thatâs a big reason why, WORLDWIDE, settlements are ALL historically clustered around sources of water like springs, wells, and rivers. (Or utilized rainwater catchment & storage) And why âthe town well is poisoned/dried up!â Is a huge and terrible thing that comes up in a ton of old stories. Losing your source of freshwater means everyone has to move somewhere else, or die.
Even in huge cities, youâd be surprised at how sophisticated freshwater delivery systems were in the middle-ages. London had the âgreat conduit.â - a man-made, underground channel that moved water directly from a freshwater spring to fill a water tank in the Cheapside marketplace, accessible to the public. This conduit was built in 1245.
Mesopotamians in the BRONZE AGE built clay pipes for sewage removal, and other pipes for rain water collection, and wells. In 4,000 BC.
Building Aqueducts to move spring water into towns was first attributed to the Minoans, who lived in 2,000 BC.
Sanskrit texts from 2,000 BC also detail how to purify water youâre not sure about: expose it to Sunlight, filter it through Charcoal, dip a piece of copper in it at least 7 times, and filter it again. (UV treatment kills bacteria, Charcoal catches many poisons and heavy metal, copper is also antibacterial) <- even if they didnât know what germs were, prehistoric humans were great at recognizing patterns, and noticing when people DIDNT die.
Persians in 700 BC used âqanatâ, or tunnels dug into hillsides to let gravity move (CLEAN!) groundwater to nearby towns + for agriculture irrigation. Qanats were still the main water supply for the entire Iranian capitol city until about 1933.
The Roman Empire (312 BC) also built aqueducts to move spring and groundwater across miles and miles.
The Incas (1450) built wondrous examples of hydraulic engineering. Their âstairway of fountainsâ supplied the entire city of Machu Picchu with fresh spring water from a pair of rain-fed springs atop the mountain. The fountain canals could carry about 80 gallons a minute.
Getting clean drinking water was just not an issue for normal people in MOST long-term settlements. They may not understand germ theory, but they knew clean water was important and would kick up a BIG fuss if those water sources were sabotaged.
In conclusion: people absolutely drank beer and wine with breakfast. They also drank water. It was not a replacement.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Cette page me fvme
ok bookmark embroidery done. now i just have to bind the edges & then iron it so any remaining pen marks vanish (i love u frixion pens)
ok itâs finished phew! i have to iron it a tiny bit to get rid of any of the pen marks still visible & then wrap it up to gift . i got some questions about isnât it quite thick, when you fold it over ? the answer is not really but it just so happened that the seam of my binding hit on the corner& made a BIG lump which is. unfortunate. but itâll be fine ÂŻ\_(ă)_/ÂŻ just donât put that corner in the book