What's past is prologue...

Jubilee-themed chocolate and cherry cake filled with cherry jam and topped with lemon icing, cherries and blueberries.
Everyone was amazed that it was vegan, and I got lots of compliments. This is fuelling my need for a bakery…
Jun 4

Jubilee-themed chocolate and cherry cake filled with cherry jam and topped with lemon icing, cherries and blueberries.

Everyone was amazed that it was vegan, and I got lots of compliments. This is fuelling my need for a bakery…

in-black:

Cillian Murphy for Vogue Italy, december 2005
Jun 3

in-black:

Cillian Murphy for Vogue Italy, december 2005

(via notmyarea)

Jun 3

(Source: gorillaz-and-shit, via beckyxdisasterpiece)

Jun 3

anendlessmemory:

Abandoned Disneyland in Beijing China.

It’s as if you hopped off of your flying elephant and walked straight into an apocalyptic wasteland, surrounded by scrubby grass, empty buildings, and the shell of a Magic Kingdom. This is the ghost of a Disney World-style amusement park in China, abandoned partway through construction, and now a hauntingly beautiful scene of decay.

(via leahonomatopoeia)

colourthysoul:

Odilon Redon - Winged old man with a long white beard
Jun 3

colourthysoul:

Odilon Redon - Winged old man with a long white beard

(via cavetocanvas)

Jun 2

(Source: shortbackandsidesss)

Tasty vegan zombie muffins filled with jammmm.
I almost feel bad about eating them now they have faces and names… 
May 29

Tasty vegan zombie muffins filled with jammmm.

I almost feel bad about eating them now they have faces and names… 

May 29

The kiss of death.

This astonishing sculpture forms part of Barcelona’s Poblenou Cemetery.  The Kiss of Death (El Petó de la Mort in Catalan and El beso de la muerte in Spanish) dates back to 1930. A winged skeleton bestows a kiss on the lips of a handsome young man: is it ecstasy on his face or resignation? Little wonder the sculpture elicits strong and varying responses from whoever gazes upon it.

(via evilskies)

May 28

(via gendryfuckingwaters)

May 28

meganelaineclarke:

charcoal drawings from this semester.

18x24 inches each

(via connectthedots)