all the squee, all the time

Posts Tagged: OMG

So I forgot I submitted this 

So I forgot I submitted this 

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cj-sewers:

animal testing done right

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I’M DEAD my Dad made me a replica of the Mizusawa team’s shirts 

My parents are such konsintedors 

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atarilake:

kwlteen:

myonlyescapeisyou:

wah-mos:

anomalousdemeanor:

trinityburn:

So I’m at an old cafe by the beach alone and I got up to use the restroom and buy a croissant. When I returned this was in my book ~

so cutee

good god

is this a movie or what

WHY DOES THIS HAPPEN TO EVERYBODY ON HERE OK WHERE IS MY NOTE SAYING I’M BEAUTIFUL AND FASCINATING 

Why does he write everything in caps it looks like he’s screaming at you




File under: things that are unfair

atarilake:

kwlteen:

myonlyescapeisyou:

wah-mos:

anomalousdemeanor:

trinityburn:

So I’m at an old cafe by the beach alone and I got up to use the restroom and buy a croissant. When I returned this was in my book ~

so cutee

good god

is this a movie or what

WHY DOES THIS HAPPEN TO EVERYBODY ON HERE OK WHERE IS MY NOTE SAYING I’M BEAUTIFUL AND FASCINATING 

Why does he write everything in caps it looks like he’s screaming at you

File under: things that are unfair

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dogimed:

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dogimed:

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sushimonstaa:

hahamagartconnect:

Coffee Stain Portrait

Ok, so I just finished watching this really sappy sweet movie called, The Secret. And because cutie pie Jay Chou from the movie,The Green Hornet was in it I had to google it. That’s where I found the movie’s soundtrack and then the Jay Chou song from it and then (I know…it’s a lot of then’s) I saw a link for this artist’s coffee project.

Hong Yi (aka Red) was inspired by a lyrics to the Jay Chou song “The cold coffee leaves the saucer, and I hold back feelings for you.” The it goes on about fragmented pieces and autumn leaves… So she created this labor intensive portrait of Jay formed by individual coffee rings. Deep, right?

If you’re like me and you need to see it for yourself, Hong Yi posted the Youtube video of herself in action.


Holy crappola. I mean, just WOW! She’s so talented… O_O;

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fabuloustophats:

Guys. Guys.

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Text

the-companions-doctor:

infinite-waffles:

alexbelle-will-see-us-through:

alexbelle-will-see-us-through:

Whoever made Jack Frost look like a fucking angel needs to be shot because it’s not right for an animated character to look like this

I

Would

Steal

His

Virginity

Any

Day

Look

How

HOT

It’s almost at fucking 700 I dare you to disagree with me

Is this what being tumblr famous feels like

He’s gorg

I don’t know how I feel about being attracted to what is essentially a bundle of pixels

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czarnyma:

amajid1001:

Yes I do

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Text

smokeandsong:

sea-change asked about scholarly works on Sayers’s detective fiction a while back, so here’s a selection of the best stuff I’ve found. Please note that they’re all full of spoilers. Finish the books first.


  • Sayers on the writing of Gaudy Night (available online at the link), from Howard Maycraft’s Art of the Mystery Story (1946). Great and excellent and wonderful.
    The book also contains a 40-page article by Sayers called The Omnibus of Crime about the history and status of the detective genre and how she approaches it; It’s quite interesting. Note that there seems to be a larger collection or expanded version of The Omnibus of Crime (listing Sayers as editor), but there isn’t much information about it online.
    (Maycraft, by the way, also includes an article from 1941 hypothesizing that the reason for the apparent intimacy between Holmes and Watson is that Watson was in fact a woman.)
  • Dorothy L. Sayers: The Centenary Celebration (1993), edited by Alzina Stone Dale. A variety of essays on the whole of Sayers’s career, including her detective fiction. I’ve read most of these, and the quality varies. There’s an essay on Gaudy Night and one on Peter and Harriet, but they basically retell the books and didn’t seem to add much.
  • The Wimsey Family: A Fragmentary History compiled from correspondence with Dorothy L. Sayers (1977), by C. W. Scott-Giles, Fitzalan Pursuivant of Arms Extraordinary. A wonderfully insane little book best described by this Amazon review, or by Sayers herself (see Gaudy Night, above): The course of English history is disturbed by the antics of dead-and-gone Wimseys, who leap from its waters like so many salmon in the mating season. My friends have become infected with my own madness; they wrestle valiantly with dates and genealogical trees and armorial bearings; they assist me to write spoof pamphlets about eighteenth century Wimseys, adorned with plausible excerpts from from Evelyn and Bubb Dodington and Horace Walpole; they embellish these fantasies with family portraits and contemporary views of Bredon Hall; they accept the existence of a poetical Wimsey who was a friend of Sir Philip Sidney, and meekly sit down to set his songs to music, while the local chemist prepares ink from an Elizabethan recipe wherewith I may forge the original manuscripts in a fair secretary hand. We discover Wimsey ciphers embedded in the plays of Shakespeare, and retrieve Wimsey common-place books from remote corners of Australia; we sally forth in a team to foist these discoveries upon bewildered literary societies in respectable universities.
  • Sayers wrote a series of letters between various characters during WWII, which is collected in The Wimsey Papers (online here).
  • via theadoradoveOn 8 January 1954, the BBC broadcast a programme entitled “A Tribute to Sherlock Holmes on the Occasion of his 100th Birthday,” from a script by Sayers.  In it, Lord Peter recounts the story of how his eight-year-old self consulted the famous detective in the pressing matter of a missing kitten.  Read a transcript here.
  • Edit: melodysustainin just pointed out that the Dorothy L. Sayers Society offers a lot of articles. (Thanks!)
     
  • I’ve been posting sayers stuff for a while, and it’s all here.

If any of you can suggest things that I’ve missed, please let me know!

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