future reflections / Ask Archive abouts others stuffs

jim-morrisons-cheekbones:

BEATLES GIVEAWAY

Too much of a good thing means a giveaway.

  • The Beatles 50th Anniversary Newsweek Magazine
  • An iPhone 4 Hard Day’s Night case

I already had the magazine when my grandma sent it to me, and I made a deal with my dad that I’d only use an Otterbox when I bought the case, and I couldn’t take it back, so it was just collecting dust in a drawer.

RULES:

  • Like/Reblog as many times as you want
  • You have to be living on planet Earth
  • You don’t have to follow me, but since I’m potentially giving you stuff, it would be nice
  • Give people a chance (aka don’t make a blog just to reblog this)

I’ll pick the winner on June 11, 2012. MAY THE ODDS BE EVER IN YOUR FAVOR.

(via ilovemgmt)



untitled by alexesbowyer on Flickr.


Wait no this is the best mug in the dining hall bro  lightmonarch:

ilona
fuckyeahpsychedelics:

“Safe Passage” by Jose Andres Rosero

me:
halp

hairtriggerflamenco:

Studio Ghibli movies reimagened  as book covers by 84/5 Studio.

the spirited away one is really creepy 

(via clouds-shaped-like-dicks)

xx91:

Summertime
tamburina:

Amanda and her cousin Amy, Valdese, North Carolina by Mary Ellen MarkNorth Carolina, USA, 1990 In 1990, Peter Howe at Life magazine sent me to North Carolina to photograph a special school for children with problems. The school was a very strange place because all of the twenty or so children were in the same classroom and their problems ranged from mild behavior instability to severe schizophrenia.Nine-year-old Amanda was the most interesting child in the class. She was my favorite child. Amanda was very intelligent and very naughty. One day I followed her home on the school bus. When the bus stopped at her house, she dashed ahead of me and ran into a nearby wooded area. I continued to follow her into the woods and eventually found her sitting in an old stuffed chair having a cigarette. She thought that I would reprimand her since I was an adult. But I said nothing.The following Sunday, I spent the day at home with Amanda and her mother. Amanda totally controlled her mother. She constantly gave her orders and proceeded to put on her mother’s nail polish and makeup. Amanda smoked openly in front of her. Her 8-year-old cousin Amy was coming over, and she was very excited. All day long, Amanda and her cousin played like children. Every forty-five minutes or so, Amanda would take a break to have a cigarette. Her mother could say nothing; Amanda was the boss.Just before I left, I looked for Amanda to say good-bye. I found her and Amy in the backyard. They were in a children’s inflatable pool. Amanda was taking her regular cigarette break.
pratfall:

Bon Iver, Bon Iver (by Gregory Euclide)
theme