That's the way it crumbles...cookie-wise.



(via hepburning)


posted 10 years ago with 189 notes (originally from susanapplegate)

(via allaboutclassichollywood-blog)


posted 10 years ago with 4,331 notes (originally from hollygohardly)

always-fair-weather:
“ 53/100 days of Gene Kelly
”

always-fair-weather:

53/100 days of Gene Kelly

(via pickurselfup)


posted 10 years ago with 131 notes (originally from always-fair-weather-deactivated)

(via misstanwyck)


posted 10 years ago with 258 notes (originally from alexdrakes)

(via misstanwyck)


posted 10 years ago with 121 notes (originally from sourvix)

deforest:

Barbara Stanwyck in Internes Can’t Take Money (1937)


posted 10 years ago with 197 notes (originally from deforest)

cavetocanvas:
“John Sloan, Flowers of Spring, 1924
From the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston:
“ John Sloan’s fame rests primarily on his robust images of New York City life during the first decades of the twentieth century. Sloan and his wife, Dolly, had...

cavetocanvas:

John Sloan, Flowers of Spring, 1924

From the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston:

John Sloan’s fame rests primarily on his robust images of New York City life during the first decades of the twentieth century. Sloan and his wife, Dolly, had moved to New York from Philadelphia in 1904. From 1915 to 1927 their apartment and his studio were on the top floor of 88 Washington Place in Greenwich Village. This studio (and a previous studio on an upper floor) gave Sloan a view of street life from an elevated vantage point, which he frequently incorporated into his paintings. Some of these pictures showed a bird’s eye view, well above the fray. In others, like “Flowers of Spring,” Sloan places the viewer only one or two stories above the street and involves him in the scene - the flower salesman seems to be calling out directly to the spectator. 

(via cavetocanvas)


posted 10 years ago with 119 notes (originally from cavetocanvas)

stormriver:

Lana Del Rey | National Anthem | Complete Version
He says to be cool but I’m already coolest.

A mix of the two demos we have of National Anthem (the Nexus concept demo and the Born To Die album demo) with the officially released album version. I made this because Nexus’ guitars and drums are perfect for the track, I can’t live without the strings from the released version and the choir in the album demo is amazing. If anyone wants a download of it or something message me and I’ll send it to you. x

(via andthatlittleblackdress-deactiv)


posted 10 years ago with 6,498 notes (originally from stormriver)

(via deforest)


posted 10 years ago with 93 notes (originally from vistavisions-blog)

(via deforest)


posted 10 years ago with 5,520 notes (originally from zoomerbro)