unknown pleasures

I believe in pink. I believe that laughing is the best calorie burner. I believe in kissing, kissing a lot. I believe in being strong when everything seems to be going wrong. I believe that happy girls are the prettiest girls. I believe that tomorrow is another day and I believe in miracles.
Audrey Hepburn

(Source: expositus, via c4tharsis)

(Source: , via odiobailar)

remolinodecolor
lanuitamericaine:

Maurice Pialat and Sandrine Bonnaire on the set of To Our Loves (À nos amours), 1983

quiero ver esta pelicularrrrr

lanuitamericaine:

Maurice Pialat and Sandrine Bonnaire on the set of To Our Loves (À nos amours), 1983

quiero ver esta pelicularrrrr

(via frenchcinema)

(Source: ajennifer, via miotroente)

(via c4tharsis)

privatism:

Sarah Van Rij (by sophie van der perre.)

privatism:

Sarah Van Rij (by sophie van der perre.)

(via lost-planets)

What a terrible mistake to let go of something wonderful for something real.
- Miranda July, No One Belongs Here More Than You (via unicornology)

(Source: travels-with-charley, via unicornology)


mercaditonicolas:

(por TORI STEFFEN)

(Source: magalucia)

no-vox:

forestmilk:
Throughout the mid to late 1970s and upwards, Hiroshi Sugimoto packed up a folding 4x5 camera & tripod, surreptitiously entered matinees (and, one can only presume, evening film events) and documented the interior of movie theatres across the United States. He would open the shutter just before the ‘first light’ hit the screen and close it after the credits finished rolling and before the house lights came on. Using this method he was able to invert the subject/object relationship of the movie theatre and use the film itself to illuminate the proscenium and interior. This content, largely unaddressed critically, is what lends the images their incredible power — along wtih the natural fascination of being made privy to the photography’s divine birthright — allowing us to see the normally invisible, to experience a finite collapse of time.

no-vox:

forestmilk:

Throughout the mid to late 1970s and upwards, Hiroshi Sugimoto packed up a folding 4x5 camera & tripod, surreptitiously entered matinees (and, one can only presume, evening film events) and documented the interior of movie theatres across the United States. He would open the shutter just before the ‘first light’ hit the screen and close it after the credits finished rolling and before the house lights came on. Using this method he was able to invert the subject/object relationship of the movie theatre and use the film itself to illuminate the proscenium and interior. This content, largely unaddressed critically, is what lends the images their incredible power — along wtih the natural fascination of being made privy to the photography’s divine birthright — allowing us to see the normally invisible, to experience a finite collapse of time.

(via jesuisperdu)