fightlikegods:

oh sweet jesus

fightlikegods:

oh sweet jesus

salazarhawn:

Tarun Tahiliani | Spring Summer 2013

The white one at the end is my favorite! It’s absolutely BRILLIANT! 

{source}

wildlingoreiad:

*crying tears of jealousy*

beautifulindianbrides:

Photo by:Pardeep Singh

beautifulindianbrides:

Photo by:Pardeep Singh

yanorayanora:

Egyptian woman, ca. 1939 | Photographer unknown

yanorayanora:

Egyptian woman, ca. 1939 | Photographer unknown

phobs-heh:

Jean Louis Gerome

thefinaljourney:

Beyoncé attends the Costume Institute Gala for the “PUNK: Chaos to Couture”

gyclli:


Turkish Lamps

Brightly colored lamps for sale in Istanbul.
by terriSpath http://www.flickr.com/photos/38688732@N08/5381328738/

gyclli:

Turkish Lamps

Brightly colored lamps for sale in Istanbul.

by terriSpath
http://www.flickr.com/photos/38688732@N08/5381328738/
pythoskeeps:

Dune - Fedaykin Death Commandos by ~Gorrem

pythoskeeps:

Dune - Fedaykin Death Commandos by ~Gorrem

phe-nomenal:

Marchesa Spring 2013 rtw

phe-nomenal:

Marchesa Spring 2013 rtw

superblys:

haramgirls:

patron-saints:

     Women from Iran’s female police force, established in 2003. These ladies undergo a three year training program requiring intensive military courses including judo, fencing, firearm training, and laying mines. They serve alongside their male counterparts, work regular beats, and they do it all in hijab. Respect.

the bottom left picture made my night

can i just direct your attention to the middle right picture

yagazieemezi:

In 1960, Garanger, a 25-year-old draftee who had already been photographing professionally for ten years, landed in Kabylia, in the small village of Ain Terzine, about seventy-five miles south of Algiers. Garanger’s commanding officer decreed that the villagers must have identity cards: “Naturally he asked the military photographer to make these cards,” Garanger recalls. “Either I refused and went to prison, or I accepted. 

“I would come within three feet of them,” Garanger remembers. “They would be unveiled. In a period of ten days, I made two thousand portraits, two hundred a day. The women had no choice in the matter. Their only way of protesting was through their look.”

Read more

tagged → #barren #ladies #reference #fashion