A visual history of Richard Nixon getting lazier

A visual history of Richard Nixon getting lazier

(via ilovecharts)


fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

Peter Voulkos was the man who completely changed the way the art world viewed ceramics, blurring the line between fine art and craft, in addition to being one sexy stud. He began teaching at Black Mountain College in Asheville, North Carolina in the early 1950s, and his students went on to become some of the most notable ceramic artists in the later half of the 20th century. In addition to teaching, he was also a world famous sculptor known for his innovative approach to clay. He would rip, tear, and abuse the clay until it became a beautiful, elegant, and energetic ceramic sculpture. If those strong hands could do so much to a lump of clay, imagine what they could do to your body… Mmm…
via ourlavenderlady.tumblr.com

fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

Peter Voulkos was the man who completely changed the way the art world viewed ceramics, blurring the line between fine art and craft, in addition to being one sexy stud. He began teaching at Black Mountain College in Asheville, North Carolina in the early 1950s, and his students went on to become some of the most notable ceramic artists in the later half of the 20th century. In addition to teaching, he was also a world famous sculptor known for his innovative approach to clay. He would rip, tear, and abuse the clay until it became a beautiful, elegant, and energetic ceramic sculpture. If those strong hands could do so much to a lump of clay, imagine what they could do to your body… Mmm…

via ourlavenderlady.tumblr.com


fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

This lovely lady is the one and only C.Z. Guest.  She was an American actress, socialite, horsewoman, fashion designer, columnist, who’s clean cut and classic fashions define American Fashion.
from Voguepedia:
C.Z. Guest stands out among Truman Capote’s fabled swans as the most serene and unruffled of the flock. With her sleek cap of champagne-colored hair and eyes as blue as her blood, C.Z.—the “cool vanilla lady,” as Capote described her—glided among the gilded lilies of the day with an “ice cream reserve”that matched her exacting sartorial choices.
“She dreads overdressing as she would adders fanged,”Vogue observed in 1959.  Unlike many of her set, who gravitated to the latest fripperies from Paris, Guest eschewed both frills and trends, cultivating instead an aura of polished refinement. “She has firm, even inflexible ideas about how she looks and what suits her… . She buys nothing solely, or even primarily, because it is ‘fashionable,’ ” the magazine noted. Accompanying the story was a photograph of the subject wearing a double strand of pearls and a pale-gold column by Mainbocher—the American master of simplicity who “might have been divinely appointed to be Mrs. Guest’s dressmaker.” C.Z. would remain loyal to her favorite couturier until Main, as she called him, closed his doors in 1971. “I like fitted clothes that show off the body,” the whippet-trim socialite once said. “My style was his style.”

C.Z. dressed impeccably for every occasion. Whether scooping up another silver cup at the races or mingling with masked society at the 1966 Black and White Ball, her strikingly simple choices turned heads. “I like the classic look,” C.Z. once said. “Keep it simple. There’s only so much you can wear.”
She a) is a fashion inspiration, b) can pull off all white lie nobody’s business, and is c) just really hot, even when she was older 

fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

This lovely lady is the one and only C.Z. Guest.  She was an American actress, socialite, horsewoman, fashion designer, columnist, who’s clean cut and classic fashions define American Fashion.

from Voguepedia:

C.Z. Guest stands out among Truman Capote’s fabled swans as the most serene and unruffled of the flock. With her sleek cap of champagne-colored hair and eyes as blue as her blood, C.Z.—the “cool vanilla lady,” as Capote described her—glided among the gilded lilies of the day with an “ice cream reserve”that matched her exacting sartorial choices.


“She dreads overdressing as she would adders fanged,”Vogue observed in 1959.
  Unlike many of her set, who gravitated to the latest fripperies from Paris, Guest eschewed both frills and trends, cultivating instead an aura of polished refinement. “She has firm, even inflexible ideas about how she looks and what suits her… . She buys nothing solely, or even primarily, because it is ‘fashionable,’ ” the magazine noted. Accompanying the story was a photograph of the subject wearing a double strand of pearls and a pale-gold column by Mainbocher—the American master of simplicity who “might have been divinely appointed to be Mrs. Guest’s dressmaker.” C.Z. would remain loyal to her favorite couturier until Main, as she called him, closed his doors in 1971. “I like fitted clothes that show off the body,” the whippet-trim socialite once said. “My style was his style.”

C.Z. dressed impeccably for every occasion. Whether scooping up another silver cup at the races or mingling with masked society at the 1966 Black and White Ball, her strikingly simple choices turned heads. “I like the classic look,” C.Z. once said. “Keep it simple. There’s only so much you can wear.”

She a) is a fashion inspiration, b) can pull off all white lie nobody’s business, and is c) just really hot, even when she was older 



fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

I thought people might enjoy this recent Cracked article about a young Stalin. (:

No

fuckyeahhistorycrushes:

I thought people might enjoy this recent Cracked article about a young Stalin. (:

No


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Vegetable porn

?
Vegetable porn


theclearlydope:

Truth.



theclearlydope:

It responds to science. That’s a start.

theclearlydope:

It responds to science. That’s a start.


moord:

i used to think i was unphotogenic then i found out i was just ugly

(via bigwheelskeeponturnin)