Thom Yorke and Stanley Donwood’s “Unsuitable Greetings Cards,” 2005
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The Backyard Bestiary. Written by Ton de Joode and Anthonie Stolk. Illustrated by Kees de Kiefte. 1982.
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Source details and larger version.
My favorite (and weirdest) equine images are collected in my horse gallery.
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i am a lover. but underneath that i’m a hater. and then underneath that i’m a lover again
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Anonymous asked:
Do u think u could handle a bad baltimore bitch
NO
Why would you call a tea “calm chamomile” and then put LICORICE ROOT in it?? Might as well call it “kinda gross licorice”… If i had paid american dollars for this stuff instead of swiping it from a hotel reception area i would be furious rn
From the 1840s through the 1860s there was a positive mania for summer dresses decorated in this very particular fashion. Several cultures including China, Japan, Malaysia and Thailand use the wing casings of certain beetles as part of embroidery and jewelry, and have done so for centuries. The beetles, which have a very short span of only a few weeks are allowed to live their full life out and when deceased, the wing covers are harvested. They have a profound iridescent coloration and are quite hard. They must be either drilled carefully to sew them down, or they are affixed by decorative stitch work around them just covering the edges.
This example is a two piece cotton organdy summer ensemble from the 1860s. The embroidery work on the blouse and skirt is enhanced with silver strip and silver thread which must have had an appealing glisten in the summer sun.
Offered through Whitaker Auctions.
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Dress of cotton muslin, gilded metal thread and Indian jewel beetles (sternocera aeqisignata), Britain, 1868-9, Victoria & Albert Museum
The use of beetle elytra in embroidery spread to Britain from India, where they had been used for centuries.
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