coilpotter:

Motoi Yamamoto working on a labyrinth of salt

coilpotter:

Motoi Yamamoto working on a labyrinth of salt

(via charmaineolivia)

oh-deir:

ACTUAL MESSAGE OF (500) DAYS OF SUMMER THAT NO ONE ACTUALLY REALIZES

(via vegansixthgun)

im-a-kittycat:

“So my amazing daughter, Emma, turned 5 last month, and I had been searching everywhere for new-creative inspiration for her 5yr pictures. I noticed quite a pattern of so many young girls dressing up as beautiful Disney Princesses, no matter where I looked 95% of the “ideas” were the “How to’s” of  how to dress your little girl like a Disney Princess…We chose 5 women (five amazing and strong women), as it was her 5th birthday but there are thousands of unbelievable women (and girls) who have beat the odds and fought (and still fight) for their equal rights all over the world

 - Jaime Moore, Not Just a Girl

Linda.

(via ithrowclaywithpeterparker)

peace.

Make!

(Source: freecocaine, via anna--karina)

josoylobon:

think4yourself:que triste!


I spent the entire day the building collapsed on the scene, watching as injured garment workers were being rescued from the rubble. I remember the frightened eyes of relatives — I was exhausted both mentally and physically. Around 2 a.m., I found a couple embracing each other in the rubble. The lower parts of their bodies were buried under the concrete. The blood from the eyes of the man ran like a tear. When I saw the couple, I couldn’t believe it. I felt like I knew them — they felt very close to me. I looked at who they were in their last moments as they stood together and tried to save each other — to save their beloved lives.
Every time I look back to this photo, I feel uncomfortable — it haunts me. It’s as if they are saying to me, we are not a number — not only cheap labor and cheap lives. We are human beings like you. Our life is precious like yours, and our dreams are precious too.
Taslima Akhter is a Bangladeshi photographer and activist.

brooklynmutt:

A Final Embrace: The Most Haunting Photograph from Bangladesh
via LightBox

What a powerful photograph

josoylobon:

think4yourself:que triste!

I spent the entire day the building collapsed on the scene, watching as injured garment workers were being rescued from the rubble. I remember the frightened eyes of relatives — I was exhausted both mentally and physically. Around 2 a.m., I found a couple embracing each other in the rubble. The lower parts of their bodies were buried under the concrete. The blood from the eyes of the man ran like a tear. When I saw the couple, I couldn’t believe it. I felt like I knew them — they felt very close to me. I looked at who they were in their last moments as they stood together and tried to save each other — to save their beloved lives.

Every time I look back to this photo, I feel uncomfortable — it haunts me. It’s as if they are saying to me, we are not a number — not only cheap labor and cheap lives. We are human beings like you. Our life is precious like yours, and our dreams are precious too.

Taslima Akhter is a Bangladeshi photographer and activist.

brooklynmutt:

A Final Embrace: The Most Haunting Photograph from Bangladesh

via LightBox

What a powerful photograph

-polaroid:

(by theonlymagicleftisart)

(Source: jessicaaanjos)

lohrien:

Photography by Oer-Wout

OMG!

(via vegansixthgun)