Vintage dexterity puzzle PNGs.
tomorrow you have to wake up in a world similar to ours, but with one big difference that you cannot change, which one do you choose
a world without any music
a world where nothing has taste
a world without any scents
a world where the all fluids including water have a greasy texture
my most unpopular stranger things related but not stranger things exclusive opinion is that i am very bored with how almost every story that has paranormal or scifi elements eventually evolves into a story about stopping the end of the world. and i do know that apocalypse media has its enjoyers however i am not one of them and i very rarely choose to consume it so you see why it would exhaust me that so often all my horror shows and podcasts turn into an apocalypse thing
ohhh fuck off. someone learned my summoning ritual again. ill be right back
Please Pour Some Rain! (2018) by Taiwanese textile and quilt artist, Lin Hsin-Chen (born in 1974)
“I’m dutch but I hate literally all dutch music” aren’t u tired
LITERALLY. THIS. Especially when it’s foreigners making fun of the dutch language like dude, mind your business. This is the language in which I learned to sing, this is the language my mom uses to tell me how much I mean, the language I use to wish people a good day when I pass by them on the street or in the store. There is so much love in this language, as there is in every single language. “Ohfjhg but this word sounds silly” don’t care didn’t ask
Tell me you’ve never read The Odyssey without outright telling me you’ve never read The Odyssey.
Meiji period fashion was some of the best in the world, speaking purely from an aesthetic standpoint you can really see the collision of European and Japanese standards of beauty and how their broad agreement even in particulars (the similarity between Japanese and Gibson girl bouffants, the obi vs the corset, the obi knot vs the bustle, the mutual covetousness for exotic textiles, the feverish swapping of both art styles and subjects) combined and produced some of the most interesting cultural exchange we have this level of documentation for. Europeans were wearing kimono or adapting them into tea gowns, japanese were pairing lacy Edwardian blouses with skirt hakama and little button up boots. haori jackets with bowler hats and European style lapels. if steampunk was any good as an aesthetic it would steal wholesale from the copious records we have in both graphic arts and photography of how people were dressing in this milieu.
«The botany professor,» from Kkokei Shimbun, October 20, 1908.
she’s wearing a kimono blouse or haori, edwardian skirt or hakama, gibson girl bouffant, a lacy high-collar blouse with cravat and brooch, and a pocket watch with chain
1910-1930 (Taishō era, right after Meiji, which I should have included in my OP) men’s haori with western lapels
I have a love for both kimonos and bustle dresses, so I love seeing how the two fashions influenced each other over this period. And thanks to Pinterest, I have pictures!
Victorian tea gown that clearly started as a kimono. It still has the long furisode sleeves, but now they’re gathered at the shoulder and turned around so that the long open side is facing the front instead of the back. Similarly the back is taken in with curved seams to fit the torso and pleated below that for the skirt.
Woodblock of a woman in a a bustle dress made with colorful patterned fabrics and examples of how a woman could style her hair with it.
More prints to showcase hairstyles, two women wearing western wear and two women wearing kimonos.
This next one’s modern, but it involves hoopskirts so I’ll add it in because it makes me so happy. There’s been different styles of wedding fashion that take kimonos and give them a more modern look. Often this involves taking a kimono and then cutting and resewing it into a new dress. Very pretty, but it can’t ever be worn like a traditional kimono again. But now there’s another trend where the bride wears a hoopskirt with a white skirt, then you take the kimono and drape it on. The back of the kimono covers the front of the dress, the long sleeves fall across the sides or the back, and you still wear an obi with it. The result is pretty and the kimono itself doesn’t have to be altered at all.
And because you mentioned steampunk, I have to add in these two:
Personally I’m a big fan of Taisho Meisen kimono, which are what happen when the Japanese textile industry abruptly gets access to aniline dyes, new spinning and weaving technology, and the concept of Art Deco:
Brilliant Venus at magnitude -4 and Comet NEOWISE
Credit: Radical Retinoscopy
Tudor-esque dress, 1890. House of Worth
in your 20s you must rediscover the joys of arts and crafts to stave off spiritual decay
heytherewerewolvesitsmeyagirl:
Morning comrades who wants to see some wacky art deco vehicles
Always
Don’t let it be said I don’t give you nothing
These are less vehicles and more creatures. Like I feel the bottom right I could encourage to eat seeds and berries out of my hand
Petting the radiator grill whilst making hushing noises, such a gentle thing
Vehicles you need to gently feed an apple before you can drive them
“The Path of True Love Never Did Run Smooth” Talbor Hughes (English, 1869-1942)
taking your own advice is so hard. it’s “make bad art” this and “kill your perfectionism” that until i sit down with an idea i like. the i have to execute it perfectly Or Else