Put Your Hands Up!

May 01

(Source: mystandards, via animode)

Apr 29

(via papercutlions)

Apr 22

(via animode)

Mar 02

(Source: makebelievethati-impress, via papercutlions)

Feb 29

“Don’t be so damn hard on yourself. Yeah, you screwed up. You’re not perfect, fine. Learn from it. But don’t punish yourself. Be kind to you, even when you screw up. You’ll bounce back eventually. You’ll make up for it.” —

Stephanie Klein

(via anditslove)

(Source: pinkbubblemonster, via papercutlions)

Feb 14

“When I sing ‘Someone Like You,’ I know that every single person in the room will be able to relate to it. That’s where that emotional connection comes from. I have sympathy for myself, I have sympathy for them, they have sympathy for me, and I know that we are all there knowing exactly how each other feels. It’s like a big pact. You can just feel it. You can slice it.” — Adele in the March Issue of Vogue

(via vogue)

(Source: Vogue, via vogue)

Feb 13

“5 Rules of happiness 1. Don’t Hate 2. Don’t Worry 3. Give More 4. Expect Less 5. Live Simply”

Feb 12

“Scientists say the universe is made up of protons, neutrons and electrons. They forgot to mention morons. #funnyteens XP”

“Life happens. People change. Feelings change. Relationships end. Memories stay. #funnyquotes”

Feb 11

cavetocanvas:

Jenny Holzer, from the Living Series, 1980-82
From MoMA:

Since the late 1970s Holzer has used text as her primary artistic vehicle. Many works have had a public presence; her pithy, ironic, and often disturbing statements have been presented on posters, T-shirts, baseball caps, and a flashing screen in Times Square, New York. In the Living series, she has adopted the bronze plaque in order “to have the look of a voice of authority, of the establishment,” she has said.

cavetocanvas:

Jenny Holzer, from the Living Series, 1980-82

From MoMA:

Since the late 1970s Holzer has used text as her primary artistic vehicle. Many works have had a public presence; her pithy, ironic, and often disturbing statements have been presented on posters, T-shirts, baseball caps, and a flashing screen in Times Square, New York. In the Living series, she has adopted the bronze plaque in order “to have the look of a voice of authority, of the establishment,” she has said.

(via papercutlions)