sourpussclothing:

Don’t let it happen to you! We have so many coffee mugs, there’s no reason to be caffeine deprived!

sourpussclothing:

Don’t let it happen to you! We have so many coffee mugs, there’s no reason to be caffeine deprived!

22 notes

gothiccharmschool:

gothtriggers:

Conveniently placed by your home’s main entrance for door-to-door evangelicals in front of.

Oh, how I want this. The RealHusband would never, ever agree to it being in the house, but I still covet it like mad.

I’m super into this

(Source: sexhaver)

11,510 notes

andre-cs:

this is great.

(via scatcat)

107,255 notes

baristart:

the crimson roast

baristart:

the crimson roast

loveevy:

Just finished up this embroidery last night! I’m SO happy with how it came out. What do you think?

Quote is from an old favorite punk song by The Briefs. [Link to Youtube: Poor and Weird]

loveevy:

Just finished up this embroidery last night! I’m SO happy with how it came out. What do you think?



Quote is from an old favorite punk song by The Briefs. [Link to Youtube: Poor and Weird]

30 notes

sassputin:

$15 for these babies and totally taking requests…keepin’ it descendents though, milo is very easy to draw ;)

sassputin:

$15 for these babies and totally taking requests…keepin’ it descendents though, milo is very easy to draw ;)

60 notes

this is just great.

storyboard:

The Creators of NYC: Tattoo Artist Virginia Elwood

Josh Wool spent a decade as an executive chef, opening restaurants across the south. But all that changed in 2010, when the carpal tunnel in his hands meant he could no longer work. To keep from going stir crazy, he picked up a camera and found his next calling. Two years, thousands of portraits, and a move to New York later, Wool is documenting the people who inspire him on a daily basis. Welcome to Creators of NYC.

Virginia Elwood

Tattoo artist Virginia Elwood has been plying her craft for the last 12 years and has made a name for herself at New York Adorned as one of the top talents in the industry. I first saw her work several years ago, and I bumped into her on the G train in Brooklyn shortly after I arrived in New York. After almost a year of exchanging emails, we finally sat down in her Carrol Gardens home.

When did you figure out that tattoo art could be an actual career?

When I was a little kid, I remember wanting to be either a scientist, a ballerina, or a garbage man. I don’t think I had a definition or reference for “art as a career.” I set out on my own at a really young age and drifted from one random job to the next … a career in fine arts was not a realistic or practical goal at that time. The idea that a person could actually get paid to draw didn’t occur to me until I fell head over heals for tattoos as a teenager in the 90s. 

Read More

8,863 notes

kaelyh:

omg

(Source: arielmh, via tinytangerines)

48,362 notes

sailorcharlie:

hollywoodlady:

Natalie, James, Rita, Marilyn, Gregory, Ginger, Audrey, Marlon & Sally

Love me some Vinyl! ♥

(via vintagevandalizm)

the holy mother of crafting is still a babe
novisplit:

martha stewart. i was stuck in an elevator with her about ten years ago.

the holy mother of crafting is still a babe

novisplit:

martha stewart. i was stuck in an elevator with her about ten years ago.