Smellyâs Song Of The WeekâŚ..
Angine de Poitrine - Sherpa
TOSâŚ..Iâve been following these on Insta for a while and find them strangely addictive. I showed this to @loveaxiomatic and she described it as NIGHTMARE FUELâŚ..
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers





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Smellyâs Song Of The WeekâŚ..
Angine de Poitrine - Sherpa
TOSâŚ..Iâve been following these on Insta for a while and find them strangely addictive. I showed this to @loveaxiomatic and she described it as NIGHTMARE FUELâŚ..

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
finally finished this oh my godddddddđđ it took ages cause i had wayyy too much fun with the tweening. anyway ive been wanting to do this animation meme for ages and i realized... what's more repetitive and exhausting than trying to perform site-directed mutagenesis???
this has been my life for the past 2 1/2 years đđđ thank god we're finally making real progress
Polymerase chain reaction
âPlacing a strip of eight PCR tubes into the thermal cycler in University of Tartu.â - via Wikimedia Commons
I've joined PCR in the Walk 100 Miles in May challenge to raise money for prostate cancer research.
You can help by donating here Every little bit helps!
Annoyed acquiring PlusLife at-home PCR test in Canada is convoluted.
It's not that difficult; just tedious. Just have to order from the EU or New Zealand. Or change the currency to Switzerland or use a VPN and change to an European geolocation.

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
poggers circuit fighter
Black Women in Fashion: Trendsetters & Trailblazers
Alright, letâs talk about Black women in fashion.
If weâre being real, Black women ARE fashion. The blueprint. The moment. The trendsetters. The ones who push the industry forward, even when it refuses to give them their credit. We see it everywhereâfrom the runways to the streets to the red carpets. And yet, Black women still have to fight for a seat at the table in an industry that wouldnât even be half as innovative without them.
So, letâs ramble a little about the impact, the influence, and the undeniable legacy of Black women in fashion.
The Pioneers Who Set the Stage
Before there was a Rihanna or a Zendaya effortlessly shutting down red carpets, there were the trailblazers, the OGs who fought to be seen.
Donyale Luna â The First Black Supermodel
Letâs start with Donyale Lunaâone of the most overlooked yet influential Black models of all time. In 1966, she became the first Black woman to grace the cover of Vogue. This was a big deal because, at the time, magazines were almost exclusively white. But Luna? She broke the mold with her statuesque beauty, her otherworldly presence, and her refusal to conform to industry standards.
Lunaâs career was cut short, but her legacy? Undeniable. Without her, thereâs no Naomi, no Tyra, no Adut Akech.
Naomi Sims â The First Black Model Mogul
Another OG? Naomi Sims. She was the first Black model to break into mainstream fashion in the 1960s, at a time when agencies straight-up refused to sign Black girls. She didnât just let the industryâs racism stop herâshe built her own legacy, starting a multimillion-dollar beauty brand that paved the way for Black-owned beauty companies today.
The Supermodels Who Took Over
Now, you canât talk about fashionâs golden era without mentioning Naomi Campbell.
Naomi Campbell â The Blueprint
Naomi Campbell IS fashion. She wasnât just walking the runwayâshe was owning it. The attitude, the confidence, the walkânobody does it like Naomi.
But letâs not forgetâshe had to fight for those spots. Despite being one of the most talented and in-demand models of her era, she was often paid less and booked less than her white counterparts. It took Gianni Versace, who made sure she earned the same paycheck as her peers, to truly highlight the industryâs racism.
Tyra Banks â Breaking Barriers
Tyra wasnât just a modelâshe was a game-changer. In 1997, she became the first Black woman to land the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Edition, an issue that was historically all about white women with blonde hair and blue eyes.
But Tyra wasnât just breaking barriers in front of the camera. She went on to create Americaâs Next Top Model, giving Black girls a platform in an industry that constantly tried to shut them out.
The Designers Who Changed the Game
Black women havenât just been wearing the clothes. Theyâve been making them.
Ann Lowe â The Designer Behind Jackie Kennedyâs Wedding Dress
Ever heard of Ann Lowe? Maybe not, but you definitely know her work. She designed Jackie Kennedyâs wedding dress in 1953, but guess what? She never got credit for it. Thatâs rightâone of the most famous wedding dresses of all time was made by a Black woman, and history tried to erase her.
Ann was a couture-level designer who dressed Americaâs wealthiest families, yet she was often underpaid and uncredited because of her race.
Tracy Reese â The Queen of Chic
If you donât know Tracy Reese, let me put you on. Sheâs been in the game since the â90s, creating colorful, feminine, and elegant designs worn by women like Michelle Obama, Sarah Jessica Parker, and BeyoncĂŠ.
Her influence? Immeasurable. She made high fashion wearable, elegant, and funâproving that Black women donât just follow trends, they create them.
The Celebrities Who Make Every Moment a Fashion Moment
Itâs one thing to wear the clothes. Itâs another thing to make the clothes legendary.
Rihanna â The Fashion Mogul
Rihanna doesnât just wear fashionâshe defines it. From her early days as a pop princess to becoming the first Black woman to lead a luxury brand under LVMH, Rihannaâs impact is unmatched.
Fenty isnât just a brandâitâs a movement. She made sure every shade was included in beauty. She made luxury streetwear a thing. And donât even get me started on her red carpet moments.
BeyoncĂŠ â The Standard
BeyoncĂŠ doesnât just show up to fashionâshe commands it. Sheâs the moment every time she steps out. Whether sheâs in custom Balmain at Coachella, dripping in jewels for the MET Gala, or turning airport paparazzi shots into style inspo, BeyoncĂŠ is the standard.
Her influence is global. Designers race to dress her, and when she wears something, itâs instantly iconic. But itâs not just about the looksâitâs the intention. From her âBlack Is Kingâ visuals to her Renaissance tour wardrobe, BeyoncĂŠ uses fashion as a form of storytelling, honoring Black history, culture, and futurism all at once.
Letâs not forget: she launched House of DerĂŠon before celebrity fashion lines were a thing. Now, with IVY PARK, sheâs merging athleisure with high fashion, creating inclusive pieces that celebrate all body types and all shades of Blackness.
BeyoncĂŠ doesnât just walk into a roomâshe redefines the room. And fashion? It moves when she says move.
The Legacy Lives On
So. Fashion has always tried to gatekeep Black women from getting the credit they deserve. But the truth is, Black women are fashionâs biggest inspiration. From streetwear to haute couture, from vintage to futuristicâBlack women set the trends that everyone else follows.
So, the next time you see a viral fashion moment, just know: A Black woman probably did it first.
This was a post by the PCR.
EVERYBODY LOOK AT MY BEAUTIFUL BOYS