Pietra Dura 18k Gold Carnation Flower Earrings, 1870
almost home
Mike Driver
Jules of Nature

Product Placement
Not today Justin
noise dept.
art blog(derogatory)

gracie abrams
cherry valley forever
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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macklin celebrini has autism

Andulka
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
The Stonewall Inn
EXPECTATIONS
Sade Olutola

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@mxcottonsocks
Pietra Dura 18k Gold Carnation Flower Earrings, 1870

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Misty morning in late May
first time editing in probably three years! every time I hear this song I think of her </3
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 3.5/5
Summary/thoughts: A mysterious and unsocial woman and her son show up to a town. We learn the hard truth of her origins.
Red and Black ink on an index card.
Disclaimer: I draw images by hand for novels I've read. I've been doing this since 2010. I used a variety of references from posters, movies, book covers, art, old paintings. I am not trying to claim the ideas are original by me.
Design for Living (1933) - dir. Ernst Lubitsch

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Hélène de Montgeroult (1764-1836) - Thème Varié dans le genre moderne for Piano in G-Major. Performed by Edna Stern, 1860 Pleyel concert grand piano.
The Woman In White by Wilkie Collins
I love this book to death and I need more like it
"haaaa the famous biting boy" god how i wish that were me
Hugo Charlemont - A Walk (1897)

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sorry it’s a bit blurry, but here’s two adult sandhill cranes with their baby and a redwing blackbird! (taken in wisconsin)
Bleak House is such a funny name for a Gothic novel in general. Really drilling the genre down to its bare essentials here.
Antique Czech Glass Charms
(c. 1890s-1930s)
There's an awful trend in reading that's this CinemaSins kind of rejection of abstract concepts and suspension of disbelief, that makes people say it's bad writing when authors use descriptions that aren't immediately one to one with physical reality.
Like it's bad when a "tattoo is undulating" (as opposed to... "drawn in a wave like pattern on the skin"?), or when hair is "wet wheat from a late Summer field" (as opposed to "sort of brownish light yellow that dries lighter, but is not actual wheat stalks growing on someone's head but kind of reminiscent of the color and texture"?), or when when ice cream tastes like midnight at the fair" (as opposed to "ice cream flavour bringing back memories of undefined ice cream flavours that are individually popular but always tied to a memory of late evening at the fair ground and probably smelling vaguely like popcorn and sugar"?).
Please. We have to get back to understanding abstract descriptions that evoke feelings and memories and mental images or things we haven't experienced yet. This hyper utilitarian way of reading and judging text is killing fiction. it's robbing you of experiencing things you haven't actually personally experienced.
Basil Rathbone as Marquis St Evremonde in A Tale of Two Cities (1935)

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if theres one thing that really pissed me off from my 3 years of architecture i took in high school it's learning about how we used to have all these little techniques to maximize or minimize heat or warmth and now we just merrily abandoned all those to have the same copypaste style buildings everywhere that are often INCREDIBLY unoptimized to the local weather and climate so we can just throw more money at our heating and cooling bills
where i live it is hot as balls approximately 80% of the year. i do not want a massive butt-ugly grey mcmansion with a huge echoey open-concept kitchen-livingroom-foyer-diningroom-staircase that has huge windows so i can have an hvac unit the size of a barge heaving and straining to keep it at a constant 72 the grees. i want a north indian traditional style home with small windows to force the airflow to cool, decorative grates to limit the amount of sunlight, and a COURTYARD with a POND *smashes unspecified large object*
I hate learning about instances of "oh yeah we know how to do that, we just don't".
I don't think this is an appropriate response to an article about South Asian farmers losing their teeth because temperatures are now reaching 45 Celcius.
The average Tumblr blogger has such poor manners that even a pig would be embarrassed to bring them home to its mother.
After I suspected a climate connection to tooth decay, I conducted systematic saliva pH testing across my patient population and documented
okay so i think i found the article op's (and me in my tags) talking about. being exposed to over 40 celsius (120 farenheit or so) for the whole day means youre sweating a LOT (the article says rashid- the farmer at the centre of the text- drinks around 17 liters a Day. humans usually only need 3, so i presume the rest is mostly used for sweat). so much so that the organizm reroutes water from other parts of itself to not die of heatstroke - salivary glands included, which means that 1. they have very little saliva in comparison to a healthy human being 2. what little their bodies DO produce is incredibly acidic, falling to ~5.5 ph from the ideal of 7ph. Teeth dissolve. Quickly. There's a mention of someone losing 8 teeth in two years
im not reading the whole article now (headache -_-), but later on the author of the article says about 30 million people (employed in agriculture) are at risk for extreme dental health problems. 30 million people at risk of not being able to eat solid food. 30 million people at risk of not being able to find work. being able to marry. being able to be part of their community. being able to speak clearly
this is. fucking horrible feels like an understatement, but it is the best i have. this exceptionally, terribly inhumane, and the pakistan goverment's lack of a plan to adress this is embarassing
"I realized I was witnessing something far more systemic and urgent than a collection of individual dental problems. This was environmental collapse writing itself directly into human biological systems."