normalize hand tattoos for people with boring, normal careers 2023
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME👸🏽💜💛
Sleepy girls who get up before noon are so so so brave
Hi, and thank you for taking the time to read this message!
For creative, personal and work-related reasons, your resident ethereal, sparkling and chonky aesthete is relocating from Chicago to New Orleans this summer! A cross-country move is expensive, so my goal with this gofundme is to cover the costs to transport my belongings, as well as have a head start on the rent for my housing as I transition and begin to work.
Donations via via gofundme, as well as via Venmo (@iridessence), cashapp ($iridessence) or PayPal are welcome.
Thank you for considering and/or sharing!
I feel sooooo beautiful today 🦩
how yall doing this friday? let’s all have a nice weekend
here one day, gone the next… 🌬
i don’t need a driver’s license i’m a city girl i go on the bus and pretend everyone is a little in love with me and then thank the driver while getting off like i’m a lady and it’s my carriage. vroom vroom <3
Reconstruction of the clothes of women from the Minoan era in Crete (reconstructions made by Dr. Bernice Jones).
The clothes of Minoan women were surprising with their style and variety of patterns. Greek women of later times wore clothes with completely different stylistic solutions. The exposed breasts were a characteristic feature of the dress of Minoan and Mycenaean women. They attached great importance to their attire, wear and used jewelry. They wore a wide and long skirt with a decorative belt tightening the waist and a tight-fitting bra with a metal frame revealing the breasts. They put on coats or capes on cooler days. Hair, intricately combed, was decorated with brown or gold ribbons, beads or headbands. Others wore appropriate headgear. They wore unusual hats. Some were wide, while others were tall, almost completely covering their hair, decorated with feathers or ribbons.
It can be seen at the Hellenistic Museum in Melbourne, Australia. The reconstructions are based on frescoes.
Photos: Tahney Fosdike.
The Grand Canyon, 7/24/21