Apparently my twitter is connected to my Tumblr

… I haven’t used Twitter, or even logged on to the damn thing in over 3 years… still getting new followers. So for all of you who are on Twitter, and like my tumblr, follow me here. I have no idea what is going on in the world of tweets.

(via ericka-xo)

fuckyeahtattoos:

Right after the second session (still a little bloody and swollen). A couple more to go before it’s all done!
Dorian Gray at Ace’s Tattoo in Albuquerque, NM is fabulous.

fuckyeahtattoos:

Right after the second session (still a little bloody and swollen). A couple more to go before it’s all done!

Dorian Gray at Ace’s Tattoo in Albuquerque, NM is fabulous.

hellyeahdisneyfanart:

Aphrodite.
fuckyeahtattoos:

I got this tattoo at dark lotus in fayetteville NC. It’s an excerpt from Danny boy which was my grandpas favorite song. He meant a lot to me and so does this piece 

fuckyeahtattoos:

I got this tattoo at dark lotus in fayetteville NC. It’s an excerpt from Danny boy which was my grandpas favorite song. He meant a lot to me and so does this piece 

celestialmazer:

THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF A DRESS

Restored dress as worn by Ellen Terry in her 1888 portayal of Lady Macbeth.

“When Ellen starred alongside Henry Irving in Macbeth in 1888, there was not a wide choice of fabrics available in England, and Alice could not find the colours she wanted to achieve her effects. She wanted one dress to ‘look as much like soft chain armour as I could, and yet have something that would give the appearance of the scales of a serpent.’ (Mrs. J. Comyns Carr’s ‘Reminiscences’. London: Hutchinson, 1926) Mrs. Nettlship found a twist of soft green silk and blue tinsel in Bohemia and this was crocheted to achieve the chain mail effect.

The dress hung beautifully but: ‘we did not think that it was brilliant enough, so it was sewn all over with real green beetle wings, and a narrow border in Celtic designs, worked out in rubies and diamonds, hemmed all the edges. To this was added a cloak of shot velvet in heather tones, upon which great griffens were embroidered in flame-coloured tinsel. The wimple, or veil, was held in place by a circlet of rubies, and two long plaits twisted with gold hung to her knees.’

the history blog.
the guardian
V&A 
blogspot

(via lulubonanza)