Dress
1970s
Collection Galleria del Costume di Palazzo Pitti
sign me up for more of these sleeves
every time I see him in profile, I think I love Garak’s face even more
frankly, the same is true of Londo
Garak: Of course, there’s always Major Kira. I’m being serious. I don’t think she likes me.
Odo: She doesn’t. But if she wanted you dead, you would be.
(via indigobluerose)
~~you love every second of it~~
Oh, I most certainly do!
I look forward to the day when my images are similarly displayed as the strange novelty of fandom past that someone puts on their future blogging platform~
In 15 years, someone is going to be really confused about that Lisa Frank image. Someone even more so when they find it on a shirt on eBay.
Reminding myself that The Dream Box exists and I’ll never get to see it
(via tinsnip)
the pumpkin king / sally
Okay, but holy shit, THIS IS UNREAL.
This is amazing, and that Pumpkin King makeup is a thing of unsettling beauty.
(via hanuueshe)
Something that I couldn’t take my mind off about this episode was the fact that the animators actually consciously decided to give Sadie leg hair. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a show in my entire life give a female character leg/armpit hair that wasn’t meant to emphasize ugliness, and this is especially impressive for a cartoon given the fact that it’s only really necessary to include the most defining features rather than little details as such. They actually have an excuse to not include that, but they chose to anyways. For as long as I can remember, television and movies have always liked to pretend that women just don’t grow hair that doesn’t come from their head, even in scenarios where they clearly wouldn’t have time or the tools to shave with. I appreciate Rebecca Sugar and the Steven Universe team for including such a realistic detail which no other television show or movie seems to get right, and for showing people that it’s completely natural.
(via shinebrightlikeamaryam)
Babylon 5 has 250,000 humans and aliens, a sizable portion of whom have hair. So there are bound to be hairdressers, probably even ones dedicated to the Centauri. And yet Londo has Vir do his hair for him. And not only that, Vir does Londo’s hair while Londo is in the middle of a meeting. Does Vir have a special talent for hairdressing? Does Londo just not want to be bothered to go out for it?
More seriously, this is likely supposed to mirror how nobles in the 18th century would have people come watch them as they prepared for the day. (Which strikes me as an awful thing to go through, but then, I don’t have to, so it’s not my problem.)
(How do Londo and Refa’s ranks compare, anyway? Londo is the ambassador no one wants, and Refa’s a lord of some sort, but I can’t remember if it gets any deeper into that. I want to know the order of precedence at the Centauri court, and alas, there is not nearly enough detail. Does the fact that Refa’s here watching Londo prepare imply he’s even lower down the social ladder? Or at least that Londo is trying to make it seem that way? Or is visiting in the middle of toilette just a normal thing for Centauri nobles to do?)
Also, Vir is absolutely adorable.
(via sixweekoldhedgehog)