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Hello! I'm Kat. 20. University student in Britain. This is a blog for things that interest me. I also like to dance.

meowmeowmeow

guymontagburning:

She’s really proud of herself. She rolled this out and then sat on it, admiring it, for a really long time.

iygrittenothing:

ryuyosei:

killipan-jones:

purrim:

purrim:

why are blonde jokes so short?

so men can remember them

this took an unexpected turn

Not if you just asked for directions.

image

heshouldnthavepoemedme:

The most important thing we’ve learned,
So far as children are concerned,
Is never, NEVER, NEVER let
Them near your television set —
Or better still, just don’t install
The idiotic thing at all.
In almost every house we’ve been,
We’ve watched them gaping at the screen.

albricatierra:

“Pretty is The Woman in Darkness Who Flowers with Loving”
In today’s world, it seems as if femininity is looked down upon: to have womanly features is seen as weak and inferior, especially when it comes to women of color. There is a trend in fashion photography where non-white women are being photographed as “hard” and “edgy”—details that are viewed as masculine. I challenge this by portraying women of color in a soft and romantic light as a way to say that feminine traits are not negative in the slightest.
This series of photographs is inspired by the style of Julia Margaret Cameron—a female photographer from the 1800s who worked in a pictorial style of photography:  a soft, dreamlike, slightly blurry, romantic, “pretty” look. Her techniques helped to blur the lines between commercial photography and fine art, showing that it is possible for one to become the other. 
“I have seen in the mirror and the eyes of my sisters that pretty is the woman in darkness who flowers with loving.”
-Chirlane McCray, I Used To Think
Albrica Tierra

albricatierra:

“Pretty is The Woman in Darkness Who Flowers with Loving”

In today’s world, it seems as if femininity is looked down upon: to have womanly features is seen as weak and inferior, especially when it comes to women of color. There is a trend in fashion photography where non-white women are being photographed as “hard” and “edgy”—details that are viewed as masculine. I challenge this by portraying women of color in a soft and romantic light as a way to say that feminine traits are not negative in the slightest.

This series of photographs is inspired by the style of Julia Margaret Cameron—a female photographer from the 1800s who worked in a pictorial style of photography:  a soft, dreamlike, slightly blurry, romantic, “pretty” look. Her techniques helped to blur the lines between commercial photography and fine art, showing that it is possible for one to become the other.

“I have seen in the mirror
and the eyes of my sisters
that pretty is the woman in darkness
who flowers with loving.

-Chirlane McCray, I Used To Think

Albrica Tierra

headcanonball:

joltheon:

barzul:

gOOOOOOD JOb



it’s blosem babels and batakab

headcanonball:

joltheon:

barzul:

gOOOOOOD JOb

it’s blosem babels and batakab

opulate:

how about instead of “all body types are beautiful” we say “beauty is extremely subjective and fleeting and doesn’t determine your worth and you don’t owe attractiveness to anyone so why don’t you focus on something important like being a worthwhile human being”