“I will love you if I never see you again and I will love you if I see you every Tuesday.”
— Lemony Snicket
can we take a second to ponder on the fact that a kids movie did lady armor better than the entire film and comic industry
guess who i’m talking about
did you guess? Well you’re fucking WRONG because it’s Susan goddamn Pevensie
They gave her light armor, appropriate for a small archer:chainmail, an arm brace, chest plate, and a light skirt she can easily run around murderizing dudes in the face in
her hair is also only loose in the promo pictures because Susan is fucking busy not dying because her hair was flying into her eyeballs so she braids that shit back
her mail shirt is also loose enough that it doesn’t impede her arm movements it’s almost like she’s dressed for a fight wow
I like the pinks and purples under her bitchin as hell leather armor here, because you don’t have to be masculine to shoot someone in the goddamn face
28. Cursed Sword- Purple Loosestrife (Lythrum Salicaria)
The sword said. “I am cursed.” The girl asked. “What kind of misfortune shall befall me, then?” “You? Oh, no I’m not that kind of artifact. Wield me, and those who have broken you will regret the day they were born.” The girl smiled.
“Someone New” by Hozier // “Strangers” by Frederick Foote// “Jealousy, Jealousy” by Olivia Rodrigo// via @bellecosby //@NightValeRadio on Twitter//“Mysterious Strangers” - Christos//uknown// “someone new” - hozier // “Strangers” - Andrea Castro// via @shigaretto
here’s ✨THE mushroom✨ to bless your day.
Making a silver tree ornament
— Laura Gilpin, The Hocus-Pocus of the Universe (1977)
Of stillness and water Of sweet and long goodbyes // Part 13
Moonlit village in winter (1926) by Mikhail Markelovich Guzhavin (1888-1929)
“East Boston, 1996; Night Walk,” in God’s Silence by Franz Wright
Edmund Dulac, The Snow Queen Flies Through the Winter’s Night. Illustration for “The Snow Queen: in Seven Stories,” Stories from Hans Christian Andersen, 1911.
Snowy Night by Mary Oliver
Winter, Midnight, 1894 by Childe Hassam (1859–1935)
Good Hours by Robert Frost
Street in the Evening, Prague (1875) by Jakub Schikaneder (Czech, 1855-1924)
from Street Haunting by Virginia Woolf
Old Houses, Montreal by Maurice Galbraith Cullen (1866-1934)
if you’re having a bad day, here’s a cute little marching band