Soul of a crashed car. Colour and raw inked version.
This Memorial Day, we took a look back at how the U.S. soldier has evolved over the years. Did you know camouflage wasn’t introduced until the end of World War II?
(via atra-feathers)
IMGP8381 (by merlinlocations)
OH LOOK I FOUND KEATON :D
Home sweet home… :)
For those who are interested in the “real” history, geography and structure of the beautiful Citadel of Masyaf, I found a really good guidebook by Haytham Hasan! You can download it here. :D
(via yaminoyume)
The collection of experimental photography by Luka Klikovac of belgrade, serbia pictures the randomness of colorful fluid formations submerged in water. Through klikovac’s use of close-range image capturing, he has produced a series which pictures oddly-shaped and suspended liquid forms in a glass of water. The artist used solely his camera and advanced lighting system to develop the sensuous series which he hopes the public will recognize as mirroring the experience of rorschach’s psychological inblot test.
Demersal by Luka Kilkovac
(via delucazade)
Devourer of Hearts, by shoomlah
HORUS my babbu
ahaha yes
(Source: mikerickson, via pearlyinspiration)
Vesta Tilley, impersonating a foppish young man. Originally named Matilda Alice Powles (1864 – 1952), she was the most famous and well paid music hall male impersonator of her day. She was a star in both Britain and the United States for over thirty years. Her father was a comedy actor and sometimes theatre manager, and Tilley first appeared on stage at the age of three and a half. At the age of six she did her first role in male clothing under the name Pocket Sims Reeves, a parody of then-famous opera singer Sims Reeves. She would come to prefer doing male roles exclusively, saying that “I felt that I could express myself better if I were dressed as a boy”.
(via pearlyinspiration)