(Source: pmaalllday, via ayshn-persuasion)

(Source: s-sexmachine, via whitepussy)

classicflickchick:

In this famous “Mouth of Truth” scene, Gregory Peck ad-libbed the joke where he pretends his hand gets bitten off in the mouth of the stone carving. He borrowed the gag from Red Skelton. Before shooting Peck told the director that he was going to do the gag but did not tell Audrey Hepburn. When Peck pulled his arm out of the stone carving’s mouth with his hand pulled up his sleeve, Hepburn’s horror and surprise was genuine. She gave what she later recalled was “a good and proper scream,” and the scene was finished in one take.(x)

Check out my entry on Roman Holiday on my new website!

(Source: maudit)

(Source: escap-3, via brittanylovexo)

I proudly liked to think that I was almost an athlete, that no effort could leave me breathless. But today a girl took my breath away for seconds,.. with just one simple beautiful smile. Shit! There’s no workout or training which can prepare you for that.

mindsigh:

Jeffrey Richter, “The Passionate War Rodent”

mindsigh:

Jeffrey Richter, “The Passionate War Rodent”

(via fer1972)

(via pooplick3r)

lihacircus:

Yes.

discoverynews:

Vintage Photos Enter Spooky Afterlife as Animated .Gifs
When Photoshop wizard Kevin Weir spots a somber, 19th-century Russian man in the Library of Congress’ Flickr archive, he sees more than a black-and-white photograph: He imagines a pagan who sprouts an outraged, bestial head when nobody’s looking, then resumes his pose as a solid citizen.
That’s just one vivid vision Weir has turned into an animated .gif, part of his ongoing series of vintage images transformed into absurdist portraits for the internet age.
“I just stare at the picture for a while and things start coming to me that I want to bring to life,” he told Wired in a phone interview.
By adding a dash of dark secrets ripped from his imagination, Weir has turned animated .gifs — those blinking relics of early web imagery — into freakish, alt-history fantasies that call to mind Monty Python animations and H.P. Lovecraft’s creatures.
photo: Mother Jones
very cool story and slideshow from Wired.com here

discoverynews:

Vintage Photos Enter Spooky Afterlife as Animated .Gifs

When Photoshop wizard Kevin Weir spots a somber, 19th-century Russian man in the Library of Congress’ Flickr archive, he sees more than a black-and-white photograph: He imagines a pagan who sprouts an outraged, bestial head when nobody’s looking, then resumes his pose as a solid citizen.

That’s just one vivid vision Weir has turned into an animated .gif, part of his ongoing series of vintage images transformed into absurdist portraits for the internet age.

“I just stare at the picture for a while and things start coming to me that I want to bring to life,” he told Wired in a phone interview.

By adding a dash of dark secrets ripped from his imagination, Weir has turned animated .gifs — those blinking relics of early web imagery — into freakish, alt-history fantasies that call to mind Monty Python animations and H.P. Lovecraft’s creatures.

photo: Mother Jones

very cool story and slideshow from Wired.com here

(Source: , via actegratuit)

actegratuit:

Gregory Euclide

mini rainbow I captured

mini rainbow I captured

(Source: fuckjerry, via peachysundae)