Belse thoughts

May 30

iainmacarthur:

owl in flight
ink (2012)
by Iain Macarthur

iainmacarthur:

owl in flight

ink (2012)

by Iain Macarthur

(Source: )

May 24

Californiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa see you in 2 months

Californiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa see you in 2 months

yes this really just happened….  

yes this really just happened….  

May 22

beach love - think this is when the farmers tan set in on my arm - photo by Erik!!!

beach love - think this is when the farmers tan set in on my arm - photo by Erik!!!

May 18

2headedsnake:

monogray.blogspot.com
Gustav-Adolf Mossa 1900

2headedsnake:

monogray.blogspot.com

Gustav-Adolf Mossa 1900

(via maudelynn)

May 16

(via istalkfashion)

May 15

maudelynn:

Jean Arthur in Easy Living c.1937

maudelynn:

Jean Arthur in Easy Living c.1937

“We’re always gonna have insecurities, but there’s always a silver lining; the wisdom of our insecurities. When you are aware of your insecurities and use them to your advantage instead of against you, you’ll be surprised how beautiful life is. The more you embrace something as natural as a flaw or an insecurity, the more beautiful you feel internally which will translate physically.” Stole this online”

bbook:

Frank O’Hara and Edward Gorey
Poet Frank O’Hara and macabre writer and illustrator Edward Gorey were roommates at Harvard in the late ’40s, where they furnished their apartment with garden furniture and a coffee table made from a repurposed tombstone. According to The New Yorker, the pair “established their rooms as (in the words of a home-town friend) the spot to ‘lie down on a chaise lounge, get mellow with a few drinks, and listen to Marlene Dietrich records.’” Pompous and eccentric? Perhaps. But we bet their room was the coolest place on campus.
Two-Typewriter Homes: Famous Literary Roommates

bbook:

Frank O’Hara and Edward Gorey

Poet Frank O’Hara and macabre writer and illustrator Edward Gorey were roommates at Harvard in the late ’40s, where they furnished their apartment with garden furniture and a coffee table made from a repurposed tombstone. According to The New Yorker, the pair “established their rooms as (in the words of a home-town friend) the spot to ‘lie down on a chaise lounge, get mellow with a few drinks, and listen to Marlene Dietrich records.’” Pompous and eccentric? Perhaps. But we bet their room was the coolest place on campus.

Two-Typewriter Homes: Famous Literary Roommates

May 09

(Source: missmerryreggay, via maudelynn)