4 months ago with 10,014 notes / via: chrisidk source: chrisidk
#interior #queue

(Source: pumpkincrisp)

4 months ago with 9,371 notes / via: mina1914 source: pumpkincrisp
#clothes #queue

(Source: all-things-bright-and-beyootiful)

(Source: realgrumpycat)

My heart is pierced by cupid, I disdain all glittering gold,
There is nothing that can console me, but my jolly sailor bold.

(Source: bewitchthemind)

sologatos:

35003

YW6B1676 (via bazoka.tw)

4 months ago with 138 notes / via: oneinchwonder source: 778
#cats #queue

vantasbodypillow:

the difference between parenting

(Source: raaararraauuuaaaauuaghghgghgghgh)

In the summer of 1868, Claude Monet and Pierre-Auguste Renoir set their easels side-by-side, and both composed paintings of the scene before them at La Grenouillère, which was a fashionable place for citizens to dine and boat in Paris. The paintings above show the contrast between the two artists’ perception of the scene—Renoir [top] seems to focus more on the people of the scene itself, whereas the most striking part of Monet’s piece [bottom] is the depth and effects of the water against the canvas.

Here, we have two masters of Impressionism, though their differences in technique and attention to detail are striking.

- Credible source: Renoir (Great Masters)