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#ICONIC B-ROLL

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.
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Almost a week to go until #theblackpantherexperience kicks off. We are working in collaboration with @HandsOnFamily @CultureKinetica @jazzrefreshed & @CaramelFilmClub to bring to you a great mix of #BlackPanther events -screenings/parties and much more
These Nigerian women make thousands of dollars turning plastic waste into fashionable accessories Source: alijeera .
Author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie explains why she only wears Nigerian-made clothing
Source: FT
Twin Beauties | The Black Victorians Twins Elsie (1889-1981) and Lela (1889-1962) Scott. Credit: Stafford County Historical Society, Stafford, KS
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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.
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Busayo Olupona has vivid memories of emigrating to Davis, California, from Nigeria with her family when she was 12 years old, down to the way she wore her hair. “I had circular bantu knots tightly wrapped in thread, so of course I stood out in this very white university town,” she says. “As the new kid, it was a disaster! I had no idea how fabulous I looked.”
source: Vogue.com
Kente cloth is woven into Ghana's history and identity. See the place where this famous fabric was first created
Kente cloth is woven into Ghana's history and identity. See the place where this famous fabric was first created
Black History Month!
2017 note: Hey, guys. With Black History Month just around the corner, I wanted to repost this so that teachers have a chance to print the (FREE) poster before February so that it can be used as a classroom resource if anyone feels like it might be worthwhile to have on hand. Let your teacher pals know! 2016 edit: a lot of teachers and librarians asked if there was a poster for this that they could buy. Nope! This post was made as an educational aid and teachers oughtn’t have to pay anything to get it in their classroom. So here’s a link to download the poster’s print file to print it yourself: https://gumroad.com/l/Exvau I did include the series in my recent art book 555 Character Drawings, so if you want it in a book with a lot of other stuff, that’s available, too. http://crogan.bigcartel.com/product/555-character-drawings-preorders
My favorite parts of history (as might be obvious from my choice of subject matter when making books) are the ones that fall into easily-categorized genres, genres with associated visual iconographies. This is the sort of stuff I loved as a kid: pirates, knights, cowboys, explorers, romans and Egyptians and flying aces. Stuff you could find featured in a bag of toys or a generic costume. For Black History Month, I thought I might visit some of these adventure-leaning periods and pick a few historic black people from those eras to draw, just for fun. If you’re doing a project or report in school this month, you could do worse than to tackle one of these toughies. Feel free to share some of these with youngsters that you know. And call them youngsters, they LOVE that.
(longer write-ups under the break)
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Daniel Kaluuya & Angela Bassett ‘Black Panther’ World Premiere
Hello again, and a very Happy New Year to all! So a few months has now passed since Conde Nast dropped Edward Enninful’s debut issue of British Vogue. His appointment, as the titles first black editor, inevitably began a conversation around diversity both within the pages and around those creating them. After flicking through the magazine and
Check out our latest blog post: BLKOUT

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.
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These activists are fighting for the support of the Brazilian government to back a museum dedicated to Afro-Brazilian culture and history.
Black in the Day have begun documenting the black British experience: “This is your people, this is how we used to party, this is what we used to do as a family”
An elderly priestess of the goddess Odua, Egbado-Yoruba, Nigeria, 1975. Photo by H. J. Drewal and M. T. Drewal.
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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 • No registration required • HD streaming
The exhibition African Print Fashion Now!, opening this Saturday, chronicles the history of African textiles, beginning with their 19th-century origins in West and Central Africa.
The bold, brightly colored patterns of African textiles have long represented the vitality and diversity of fashion across the continent, but their history tells a global story, from Indonesian inspirations, to Dutch manufacturers, to current popularity among fashion designers around the world. The exhibition African Print Fashion Now! chronicles this history, beginning with the fabric’s 19th-century origins in West and Central Africa.
"Because, why should a black person be a hidden figure in their own country?”
“I didn’t know there were as many black Latinos and as much diversity as there is,” Moreno, who is of Salvadorian descent, told The Huffington Post. “Why? Partly because of my ignorance but also because every Puerto Rican I saw in movies and pop culture looked very much like J. Lo ― culturally homogeneous.”