So I uh, did it again? A friend called this a Celestial design, so that's what they are now. My Celestial Gloves.
Paint is Jacquard Lumiere Metallic paint in the color 552 Bright Gold! Gloves are a pair that I probably got at a thrift store years ago??
Enjoy! I hope y'all like this pair as much as you liked the last one! :)
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While out taking photos I saw this Pied Billed Grebe with fishing wire tangled around his beak and neck
I watched it for a while, saw it try and fail to eat a crawfish because it couldn't get its mouth all the way open. After a while, it swam up to me and just kind of lingered a few feet away.
So I decided to do the only rational thing, and grabbed a bird
Removed the wire, did a quick once-over to make sure there wasn't anymore, and off they swam
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I actually did the thing and traveled to see the total eclipse today! 🌚
Click for higher quality - check out those solar flares!
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Bazen kısacık bir bakış her şeyi anlatabilir. ama asıl önemli olan bunu anlayabilene denk gelmek..
A meaningful look..
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deer walks into a store and later brings her whole family for another visit 🛒
Horsetooth Store, Gas, and RV Park
(via)
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Cover of Le Théatre Magazine featuring Ida Rubinstein as Saint Sebastien (1911) - Photo credit: "Bert"
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Yumna Al-Arashi, Axis of Evil (Yemen, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq), 2020
in Leica Fotografie International (LFI) magazine:
"This photograph was made for my first European solo show in Berlin, in the gallery Anahita Contemporary. It's a self-portrait alongside Anahita Sadighi, Moshtari Hilal and Susu AbdulMajid. We are respectively from Yemen, Iran, Afghanistan and Iraq. Despite our different roots I noticed that we all share a similar background, having grown up in Western nations that often vilify the places our families are from.
I also noticed the strong profiles of each of our faces. So I decided to create this portrait with the title Axis of Evil – a play on the term so frequently used to describe our home countries when we were growing up. It also embraces the beauty of our distinctive noses, which are often treated as ugly, something to be changed. I wanted to embrace these qualities of ours in this image, creating something powerful, defiant."
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