(via shittinflowersnsunshine)
(via shittinflowersnsunshine)
my dad ate a cucumber today and he was like “wow this is pretty cold” and then he just slowly put the cucumber down and stared into space for a really long time until he turned to me with wide eyes and quietly said, “oh my god. cool as a cucumber.”
(via shittinflowersnsunshine)
(Source: shesbombb, via shittinflowersnsunshine)
do u ever just make scenarios in your head that will never happen but make you so happy just imagining them
(via shittinflowersnsunshine)
Make it stahp.
Don’t usually reblog shit like this but yo.. this is some real shit. When you’re in some deep ass relationship with someone it all just comes out like this when you’re up in the bedroom.
(via fukinproblem)
— St. Augustine (via unconditionedconsciousness)
(via shittinflowersnsunshine)
[singing in shower] [simon cowell appears] “its a no from me”
(Source: nigerian, via shittinflowersnsunshine)
(Source: vh1, via goldenclitoris)
in 7 years its going to be the 20s again so we can bring back swing music and the aesthetics of that era but keep modern values who’s with me
you can’t repeat the past
can’t repeat the past? why, of course you can! of course you can.
(via orionyouhopelessromantic)
Happiness is like a butterfly. The more you chase it, the more it will elude you. But if you turn your attention to other things, it will come and sit softly on your shoulder. -Henry David Thoreau
(via janiemarilyn)
- Fifteen Hours
- Footprints with Matches
- Silhouette with Matches
- Helix with Matchsticks
“These pictures began by accident. I was curious to see what would happen if I allowed bacteria to grow on the surface of film. I was interested in relinquishing the control of image making to a natural process. My original thought was to remove the silver from film to make images of bacterial growth. By chance and by luck, I was not entirely successful; some slight traces of silver particles remained on a few pieces of film. As I proceeded with the experiment I was amazed to see what the bacteria were doing. The bacterial growth patterns were re-depositing the image particles, revealing a life cycle traced in silver. I could not ignore such unexpected and fascinating results. What began as a photograph had become a biograph, a trace of life, an index of an existence. I had witnessed something strange and unknown to me; I needed to look further into this phenomenon.”
(Source: take-a-walk-digital, via sweetxombiykisses)