Tumgik
#George Leigh Mallory
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Western history is full of the daring feats of explorers—Lewis and Clark in North America, John Cabot in Canada, Marco Polo along the Silk Road, and the list goes on.
But what about the explorers who set out with the same optimism as these navigational celebrities, only to face mysterious adversity?
Here are five explorers who had all the advantages of their more successful counterparts, only not to reach their goals and leave very little trace of their true fates.
Franklin’s failed Northwest Passage quest
Tumblr media
British explorer Sir John Franklin left England in 1845 with 129 crew members and officers in search of the Northwest Passage, a shipping route from the Atlantic to the Pacific through Canada.
They were expertly equipped with iron-sheathed ships, three years of food and drink, even an early daguerreotype camera.
Instead of finding the passage, however, the ships became trapped in the Canadian Arctic’s most treacherous, ice-choked corner, north of King William Island.
Twenty-four men died by April 1848, including the captain.
The new captain, Francis Crozier, apparently abandoned the ships and set out with the remaining crew over the icy terrain in a desperate attempt to reach land.
Inuit hunters reported seeing bedraggled crewmen dragging sleds across the ice.
Tumblr media
A few bodies have since been found, along with deserted campsites and bits and pieces, including silver dessert spoons and cotton shirt fragments.
In 2014, the wreck of Erebus was located, followed by the Terror in 2016.
While the wrecks themselves did not solve the mystery of what killed the men, the recovered bones of some men bore knife marks, suggesting the crew was fending off starvation by cannibalism.
Fawcett’s Lost City of Z
Tumblr media
British explorer Col. Percy Harrison Fawcett already had undertaken several expeditions into the Amazon early in the 20th century when he came across an irresistible Portuguese document at the National Library of Brazil.
Detailing the discovery of a “large, hidden, and very ancient city, without inhabitants, discovered in the year 1753,” it told of grand ruins hidden in the Mato Grosso jungle.
Fawcett instantly decided to find the ruins, which he named the Lost City of Z.
Tumblr media
After one failed attempt to find this awesome site, Fawcett, his son Jack, his son’s friend Raleigh Rimell, and two local laborers departed into the Brazilian wilderness in April 1925.
They wrote their last dispatch home on May 20.
Their Brazilian helpers had left them, Fawcett noted, but “You need have no fear of failure.”
No one ever heard from the party again.
Their disappearance became an obsession, with adventurers over the next decades trying to retrace their steps.
A reporter who went after Fawcett in 1930 also disappeared, as did a Swiss hunter and his search party.
Unconfirmed reports filtered out from the jungle of pale-skinned prisoners and their young children, but Fawcett and his party have never been found.
Mallory’s ill-fated Everest summit
Tumblr media
The hopes of the world, or at least of the world’s mountain-climbing community, were pinned on George Leigh Mallory when he began his third attempt to reach the summit of Mount Everest in April 1924.
The handsome English climber had reached 27,235 feet, 1,800 feet below Everest’s peak, on a 1922 expedition.
This time, he intended to make it to the top.
On June 8, Mallory and his young companion, Sandy Irvine, set out on what they hoped would be the final sprint.
A fellow climber spotted them, two black spots, about 800 vertical feet below the summit. Then a snow squall closed in, and the climbers disappeared.
Mallory’s body was not recovered for 75 years.
In 1999, climber Conrad Anker discovered Mallory’s frozen corpse at 26,760 feet on the moun­tain’s north face. Irvine’s body has not been found.
Tumblr media
Whether Mallory was on his way up to the sum­mit or was coming down from a successful ascent is unknown.
If he did reach the peak, he would have beaten Edmund Hillary, the New Zealand mountaineer who has been lauded for being the first man to reach the summit since his successful ascent in 1953.
But the world may never know.
Amelia Earhart’s strange disappearance
Tumblr media
Amelia Earhart was world famous. She was the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic and the first person to fly from Hawaii to California.
Her round-the-world flight in 1937 was her final challenge.
Accompanying her when she took off from Miami on 1 June 1937 was an experienced navigator, Fred­erick Noonan.
The first legs of the 29,000-mile trip were ardu­ous, but the 2,556-mile Pacific leg from New Guinea to tiny Howland Island was the toughest of all.
From the air, Earhart radioed she couldn’t see the island and was running low on fuel. Then silence.
Recent forensic analysis suggest that bones found in 1940 on the Pacific island of Nikumaroro were those of the avia­tor.
Dimensions of Earhart’s body accord­ing to photos and clothing matched measurements recorded of the bones.
Unfortunately, the bones themselves were lost—so DNA testing cannot be done.
Researchers are still following every lead, from a skull fragment found in a museum to underwater fragments possibly from her plane, but so far, her disappearance remains a mystery.
Ambrose Bierce’s baffling Mexican quest
Tumblr media
Ambrose Bierce isn’t the typical explorer. A Civil War veteran, he was also a journalist and poet, known for his cynical and misanthropic writings.
One such entry in his Devil’s Dictionary, for example, reads, “Fidelity: A virtue peculiar to those who are about to be betrayed.”
In 1913, with his family dead and his career waning, the 71-year-old Bierce headed out to visit Civil War battlefields, including Missionary Ridge and Chickamauga, and onward to Mexico.
“I am going to Mexico with a pretty definite purpose, which is not at all presently disclosable,” he wrote to his secretary.
He may have joined up with Pancho Villa’s rebel army and traveled with it to Chihuahua.
Reports from one of Villa’s battles told of an “old gringo” killed in the fighting.
Could that have been Bierce? Or did he live on in Mexico, California, France, or Brazil, where reports have placed him over the years?
13 notes · View notes
thatbiologist · 11 months
Text
G’eth Character Name Bank
First Names
Masculine Names
Alfred, Andrew, Arlo, Arthur, Balthazar, Barry, Ben, Benedick, Bernard, Burchard, Cedric, Charibert, Crispin, Cyrill, Daegal, Derek, Digory, Drustan, Duncan, Edmund, Edwin, Elric, Evaine, Frederick, Geffery, George, Godfreed, Gregory, Guy, Harris, Harry, Horsa, Hugh, Humphrey, Iago, Jack, Jeremy, John, Kazamir, Kenric, Lawrence, Leoric, Lorik, Luke, Lynton, Lysander, Madoc, Magnus, Maukolum, Micheal, Miles, Milhouse, Mordred, Mosseus, Ori, Orvyn, Neville, Norbert, Nycolas, Paul, Percival, Randulf, Richard, Robert, Roderick, Stephen, Tennys, Theodoric, Thomas, Tristan, Tybalt, Victor, Vincent, Vortimer, Willcock, Willian, Wymond
Feminine Names
Adelin, Alice, Amelia, Beatrix, Beryl, Bogdana, Branwyne, Brigida, Catalina, Catherine, Claudia, Crystina, Deanna, Desdemona, Elaine, Elinora, Eliza, Enide, Eva, Ferelith, Fiora, Freya, Gertrude, Gregoria, Gueanor, Gwen, Gwendolyn, Hannah, Hegelina, Helen, Helga, Heloise, Henrietta, Igraine, Imogen, Jacquelyn, Jane, Jean, Jenny, Jill, Juliana, Juliet, Katie, Leela, Lettice, Lilibet, Lilith, Lucy, Luthera, Luz, Lyra, Malyna, Margherita, Marion, Meryl, Millie, Miranda, Molle, Morgana, Morgause, Nezetta, Nina, Novella, Olwen, Oriana, Oriolda, Osanna, Pamela, Petra, Philippa, Revna, Rohez, Rosalind, Rose, Sallie, Sarra, Serphina, Sif, Simona, Sophie, Thomasine, Tiffany, Ursula, Viola, Winifred, Yrsa, Ysabella, Yvaine, Zelda, Zillah
Gender-Neutral/Unisex Names
Adrian, Alex, Aiden, Arden, Ariel, Auden, Avery, Bailey, Blaire, Blake, Brett, Breslin, Caelan, Cadain, Cameron, Charlie, Dagon, Dana, Darby, Darra, Devon, Drew, Dylan, Evan, Felize, Fenix, Fernley, Finley, Glenn, Gavyn, Haskell, Hayden, Hunter, Jace, Jaime, Jesse, Jo, Kai, Kane, Karter, Kieran, Kylin, Landon, Leslie, Mallory, Marin, Meritt, Morgan, Nell, Noel, Oakley, Otzar, Paris, Peregrine, Quant, Quyn, Reagan, Remy, Robin, Rowan, Ryan, Sam, Samar, Sasha, Sloan, Stace, Tatum, Teegan, Terrin, Urbain, Vahn, Valo, Vick, Wallace, Waverly, Whitney, Yardley, Yarden, Zasha
Surnames
Surnames, Patrilineal - First Name (Patrilineal Surname)
Ace, Allaire, Appel, Arrow, Baker, Bamford, Barnard, Beckett, Berryann, Blakewood, Blanning, Bigge, Binns, Bisby, Brewer, Brickenden, Brooker, Browne, Buller, Carey, Carpenter, Carter, Cheeseman, Clarke, Cooper, Ead, Elwood, Emory, Farmer, Fish, Fisher, Fitzroy, Fletcher, Foreman, Foster, Fuller, Galahad, Gerard, Graves, Grover, Harlow, Hawkins, Hayward, Hill, Holley, Holt, Hunter, Jester, Kerr, Kirk, Leigh, MacGuffin, Maddock, Mason, Maynard, Mercer, Miller, Nash, Paige, Payne, Pernelle, Raleigh, Ryder, Scroggs, Seller, Shepard, Shore, Slater, Smith, Tanner, Taylor, Thatcher, Thorn, Tilly, Turner, Underwood, Vaughan, Walter, Webb, Wilde, Wood, Wren, Wyatt, Wynne
Surnames, Townships in G’eth - First Name of (Location)
Abelforth, Argent Keep, Barrow Springs, Barrowmere, Bedford, Brunhelm, Bumble, Casterfalls, Dunbridge, Falmore Forest, Folk’s Bounty, Frostmaid, Fulstad, Heller’s Crossing, Hertfordshire, Humberdale, Inkwater, Little Avery, Marrowton, Mistfall, Mistmire, Morcow, Necropolis-on-Sea, Otherway, Parsendale, Piddlehinton, Port Fairwind, Redcastle, Ransom, Rutherglen, Saint Crois, Tanner’s Folly, Tavern’s Point, Wilmington
Surnames, Geographical Locations in G’eth - First Name of the (Location)
Cove of Calamity, Deep Woods of Falmore, Eastern Isles, Eastern Mountains, Foothills, Frozen Peak, Lakes, Maegor Cobblestones, Northern Mountains, Southern Isle, Tangle, West Coast, Wild Wild Woods, Woods of Angarad
Surnames, Nickname - First Name the (Something) 
Bald, Bastard, Bear, Bearded, Big, Bird, Bold, Brave, Broken, Butcher, Bruiser, Careless, Caring, Charitable, Clever, Clumsy, Cold, Confessor, Coward, Crow, Cyclops, Devious, Devoted, Dog, Dragonheart, Dreamer, Elder, Faithful, Fearless, Fey, Fool, Friend, Generous, Giant, Goldheart, Goldfang, Gouty, Gracious, Great, Hag, Handsome, Hawk, Honest, Huge, Humble, Hungry, Hunter, Innocent, Ironfist, Ironside, Keeper, Kind, Lesser, Liar, Lionheart, Little, Loyal, Magical, Mercenary, Merchant, Messenger, Old, Orphan, Pale, Polite, Poet, Poor, Prodigy, Prophet, Proud, Reliable, Romantic, Rude, Selfish, Sellsword, Scab, Scholar, Shield, Shy, Singer, Sirrah, Slayer, Slug, Small, Stoneheart, Swift, Tadde, Talented, Tart, Tenacious, Timid, Tiny, Tough, Traveller, Trusted, Truthful, Viper, Wizard, Wolf, Wyrm
105 notes · View notes
jonphaedrus · 1 year
Text
hello have you maybe in the past enjoyed my bnha mountaineering au? or perhaps even older, my ace attorney mountaineering au?
then have I got a FIC for YOU!
yes that's right, i, jon "jonphaedrus" phaedrus, known for writing really unexpectedly long fics about mountains, outdid myself again! by a lot! by a lot more than i expected to outdo myself by! this was meant to be a oneshot!
"what" you say "did you fucking do this time, you insane mountaineering obsessed fanfic writing guy?" well, i'll tell you: i wrote a whole ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND WORDS OF MOUNTAINEERING AU FANFIC!!
you read that right. 100k. not 10k, but 100,000 words of mountaineering au! actually a little bit more than that i think it's like 110k but like you know whatever there's a lot of it the main point is there's a lot of it
BUT WHAT'S IT GOT? you ask, sensibly, since that's a whole lot of words to only be about mountaineering. dont worry, i got you. on the menu we have served up hot and fresh:
MOUNTAINS!
CLIMBING MOUNTAINS!
THOSE FUNKY POKÉMON GUYS, THE BIG RED ONE AND THE LITTLE BLUE ONE!
FRENCH ROYALTY!
FRENCH ROYALTY CLIMBING MORE MOUNTAINS!
A DOG VORTEX!
CAT ACQUISITON!
CLIMBING EVEN MORE MOUNTAINS!
GEOLOGY!
DOM/SUB!
PASSOVER SEDERS!
THE ASSASSINATION OF JULIUS CAESAR!
CATHOLICISIM!
REALLY UNFORTUNATE SANDWICHES!
AROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS!
NAPOLEON?!
JEWS!
FOOTNOTES!
I PROMISE NOT A LOT OF ME INSISTING GEORGE LEIGH MALLORY WAS THE FIRST PERSON TO CLIMB EVEREST, LIKE A NORMAL AMOUNT OF THAT THIS TIME, I THINK ONLY LIKE TWO FOOTNOTES, I SWEAR!
ROCKS AND THE GUYS WITH ROCKS FOR BRAINS WHO LOVE THEM!
GENDER™!
PLANES TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES!
SELF-LOVE!
THE MORTIFYING ORDEAL OF BEING KNOWN!
AND, EVERYONE'S FAVORITE VACATION DESTINATION........
WISCONSIN!!!
for the low price of COMPLETELY FREE yes that's right COMPLETELY AND ABSOLUTELY FREE if you liked reading any of my previous forays into MOUNTAINEERING AND THE MOUNTAINEERS WHO DO IT, then come on down to check out THIS NOVEL I WROTE BY COMPLETE ACCIDENT AND THAT'S NOT AN EXAGGERATION!!
43 notes · View notes
tinyshe · 2 months
Text
Related post: 20 Best Inspirational Travel Quotes
1. “Attitude is the difference between an ordeal and an adventure” - Bob Bitchin
2. “Only those who risk going too far can possibly find out how far they can go.” - T.S Eliot
3. “I do not want to get to the end of my life and find that I just lived the length of it. I want to have lived the width of it as well.” - Diane Ackerman
4. “If happiness is the goal – and it should be, then adventures should be top priority.” - Richard Branson
5. “Always remember, it’s simply not an adventure worth telling if there aren’t any dragons.” - Sarah Ban Breathnach
6. “Adventure isn’t hanging on a rope off the side of a mountain. Adventure is an attitude that we must apply to the day to day obstacles in life.”- John Amatt
7. “Courage is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something else is more important than fear.” - Ambrose Redmoon
8. The very basic core of a man's living spirit is his passion for adventure. - Christopher McCandless
9. One way to get the most out of life is to look upon it as an adventure. - William Feather
10. It is only in adventure that some people succeed in knowing themselves - in finding themselves. - Andre Gide
11. To me, adventure has always been to me the connections and bounds you create with people when you're there. And you can have that anywhere. - Bear Grylls
12. It is in the compelling zest of high adventure and of victory, and in creative action, that man finds his supreme joys. - Antoine de Saint-Exupery
13. Love is an adventure and a conquest. It survives and develops, like the universe itself, only by perpetual discovery. - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
14. It is like a voyage of discovery into unknown lands, seeking not for new territory but for new knowledge. It should appeal to those with a good sense of adventure. - Frederick Sanger
15. Adventure should be 80 percent 'I think this is manageable,' but it's good to have that last 20 percent where you're right outside your comfort zone. Still safe, but outside your comfort zone. - Bear Grylls
16. An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered. An inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered. - Gilbert K. Chesterton
17. A traveler is really not someone who crosses ground so much as someone who is always hungry for the next challenge and adventure. - Pico Iyer
18. An inconvenience is an adventure wrongly considered. - Gilbert K. Chesterton
19. There's a call to adventure. It's something in the inner psyche of humanity, particularly males. - Gary Gygax
20. I'm sure, to many people, my life is not that exciting, but to me every day is an adventure. - Angela Kinsey
21. When the new becomes commonplace, people become accustomed to it. That's a tribute to our sense of adventure. - John Glenn
22. “Adventure is worthwhile.” – Aristotle
23. “Live, travel, adventure, bless, and don’t be sorry.” – Jack Kerouac
24. Adventure upon all the tickets in the lottery, and you lose for certain; and the greater the number of your tickets the nearer your approach to this certainty. - Adam Smith
25. What we get from this adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end of life. We do not live to eat and make money. -George Leigh Mallory
6 notes · View notes
thatsozack · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Visual Analysis of George Leigh Mallory by Duncan Grant 
The painting George Leigh Mallory by Duncan Grant is an oil on panel and the size of775 mm x 530 mm. The colors used in the painting are neutral skin tones and reds and oranges. The shapes used in the painting are mostly circular in shape with small brush movements. In the painting the subject of George Leigh Mallory, is a portrait of Duncan Grant’s lover and muse George Leigh Mallory. The design of the painting is to pull focus to the subject of portrait’s face, George Leigh Mallory. In Grant’s  portrait the use of unity in the left top corner of small red brush strokes highlight the George Leigh Mallory’s face, which creates asymmetrical balance compared to the top right corner of the portrait. In George Leigh Mallory the dark contrast on the bottom of the portrait and the lighter subordination draws the eyes attention back to the focal point of George Leigh Mallory. When I looked at the Duncan Grant’s portrait George Leigh Mallory, made me feel the sense of love and attraction the artist must felt for his muse. The emotion Grant evokes must be vulnerability of subject giving a sense of closeness between the two. Duncan Grant was a London based artist that lived from 1885 to 1978. Duncan Grant painted a portrait of his same sex lover George Leigh Mallory in 1912. Grant’s portrait George Leigh Mallory was made around the time a series of nudes of Mallory was created, because Mallory was Grant's muse. Grants subject in the portrait was Mallory his secret love affair, but the painting is not just a person Grant admire. The portrait symbolizes Grants own vulnerability and sharing that with another. In the painting of George Leigh Mallory Grant conveys the sense of vulnerability by the way his subject is sitting. I picked Grant’s George Leigh Mallory, because of its importance in history of same sex love and art especially in today's climate. Grant’s expression of his muse and the relationship between them show beauty in what many people may look down upon.  
18 notes · View notes
pookiestheone · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
George Leigh Mallory (1886-1924) by Duncan Grant (1885-1978)
27 notes · View notes
playitagin · 11 months
Text
1924-George Mallory & Andrew Irvine
Tumblr media Tumblr media
*(left) George Mallory.George Herbert Leigh-Mallory (18 June 1886 – 8 or 9 June 1924) was an English mountaineer who participated in the first three British Mount Everest expeditions from the early to mid-1920s.
*(right) Andrew Irvine. Andrew Comyn "Sandy" Irvine (8 April 1902 – 8 June 1924) was an English mountaineer who took part in the 1924 British Everest Expedition, the third British expedition to the world's highest (8,848 m) mountain, Mount Everest.
2 notes · View notes
anthony-thailitblog · 6 months
Text
“When asked why he was driven to reach the summit of Mount Everest, explorer George Leigh Mallory famously answered, ‘because it’s there.’ When asked why they are driven to reach the end of a cave, some cavers have played with his answer in their own explanation, ‘because it’s not there’” —Rick Stanton, Aquanaut (41)
1 note · View note
speok · 2 years
Text
Perdidos en el Everest
Perdidos en el Everest
Con una altura de 29,029 pies, el monte Everest ha cautivado durante mucho tiempo a los montañistas de todo tipo. Pero un pico que atrae a atletas y montañistas a nuevas alturas no está exento de peligro, o de un lado oscuro. Quizás el mayor misterio de la cima es el cuerpo perdido de Andrew “Sandy” Irvine, quien desapareció junto a George Leigh Mallory en 1924 a solo 800 pies verticales de la…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media
1912 portrait by Duncan Grant of mountaineer George Leigh Mallory
82 notes · View notes
liamfindlay · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Over the past weeks, I have been learning about the adventurer George Mallory. One of the exciting things about this is that, against our modern expectations, not all images of him are readily available and a bit of investigation is needed. I have enjoyed sourcing books, speaking with experts and more recently visiting the National Portrait Gallery archive to find original prints or entirely new images- some only recently discovered! These are my drawings from a wonderful visit to the archive.
"The charming expression, and the strange divine ears, so large and lascivious," Lytton Strachey wrote of him. 👂 Unlike many other sportsmen and unrelated to ears, Mallory had a deep appreciation of the artistic and philosophical aspects of life, and wrote about his expeditions in a descriptive way most unlike the matter-of-fact writing of his peers. It was in his interests to retell his experiences exactly as he'd seen and felt them. 
38 notes · View notes
desimonewayland · 6 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Duncan Grant
Portrait of George Leigh Mallory 1917
National Portrait Gallery, London
53 notes · View notes
sciscito · 4 years
Text
George Leigh Mallory
Tumblr media
For the stone from the top for geologists, the knowledge of the limits of endurance for the doctors, but above all for the spirit of adventure to keep alive the soul of man. - George Leigh Mallory
1 note · View note
ripplefactor · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Remembering George Mallory ..
59 notes · View notes
hevnovrhevn · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
George Herbert Leigh Mallory (18 June 1886 – 8 or 9 June 1924)  
George Mallory - English mountaineer, and friend of many in the Bloomsbury circle. He had affairs with Rupert Brooke, Duncan Grant and James Strachey, and fought in, and survived the Great War. Here painted and photographed (legs crossed) by Duncan Grant.
Peter and Leni Gillman’s book “The Wildest Dream” is very highly recommended, a great read.
George was last seen disappearing into the mists below the summit of, the then unconquered, Everest with companion Sandy Irvine in June 1924. George’s body was found in 1999. Irvine has never been found.
Source: pastmalebeauty
4 notes · View notes
beautifulfaaces · 3 years
Text
Female Australians Masterlist
Australian
2000s
Angourie Rice
Luca Sardelis
Olivia Deeble
Rainbow Wedell
Savannah La Rain
90s
Adelaide Kane
Aisha Dee
Alaska Leigh
Alicia Banit
Alice Englert
Alli Simpson
Alycia Debnam-Carey
Ariel Kaplan
Ashleigh Brewer
Ashleigh Chisholm
Caitlin Stasey
Cassi Thomson
Chloe Bayliss
Courtney Eaton
Elizabeth Cullen
Elizabeth Debicki
Freya Tingley
Geraldine Viswanathan
Hanna Mangan Lawrence
Hannah Dodd
Indiana Evans
Isabella Giovinazzo
Jenna Rosenow
Kaiya Jones
Kimie TsukakoshiE
Leila George
Liv Hewson
Lucy Fry
Maddison Brown
Madeleine Arthur
Madeleine Madden
Maia Mitchell
Margot Robbie
Marlo Kelly
Mia Healey
Mia Milnes
Morgan Griffin
Morgan Weaving
Olivia Dejonge
Penelope Mitchell
Samara Weaving
Sianoa Smit-McPhee
Sophia Bernard
80s
Abbie Cornish
Adelaide Clemens
Adrienne Pickering
Alice Hunter
Alin Sumarwata
Brittany Byrnes
Cariba Heine
Claire Holt
Clare Bowen
Eliza Taylor
Elizabeth Blackmore
Emelia Burns
Emilie de Ravin
Emily Barclay
Emily Browning
Emma Booth
Gemma Ward
Hannah Wang
Maddy Tyers
Melanie Zanetti
Melissas Howard
Mallory Jansen
Mirrah Foulkes
Nicky Whelan
Paige Houden
Phoebe Tonkin
Rachael Taylor
Rebecca Breeds
Sibylla Deen
Tammin Sursok
Teresa Palmer
Viva Bianca
70s
Ada Nicodemou
Anna Torv
Asher Keeder
Isla Fisher
Melissa George
Portia de Rossi
Rose Byrne
Toni Collette
Trilby Glover
Ursula Brooks
60s
Emily Symons
Gia Carides
Jacque Drew
Nicole Kidman
Rachel Griffiths
Unknown Birthday
Ella Newton
Emily Havea
Shannon Berry
2 notes · View notes