• Samantha Carter //
  • A collection of inspiration images. //
  • Archive
  • / Ask me anything....
  • / Submit
  • / Theme
honeysucculents:

Chanel
544 ♥
acid-daydreams:

wildheartsscantbebrokenn:

THERES A FUCKING CAT SITTING ON MY BLOG THIS DOESNT GET MUch bETTER OKk


🌙
105914 ♥
grenadeinagarden:

I don’t know why but this just made me think oh this is so cute and then think oh this is so sad and then I cried.
143240 ♥
noraleah:

Glory be, it’s almost here.
(via nprfreshair)
9943 ♥
i-shouldletyougo:

dressedtilnine:

I love when moments like this get captured on film. I always wonder what became of the people in them.. I bet they wouldn’t have guessed that half a century later people would still be admiring them. And think how important that kiss must have been to the both of them, to go to all the trouble. I hope to be kissed with such fervor someday. And I hope they made it.
429384 ♥
38887 ♥
anorexic-daisies:

10000th note xx
18865 ♥
kateoplis:

Blue Hour
11122 ♥
7while23:

MARTI.IN side MARGIELA by Nicolas Valois for ODDA
11032 ♥
48 ♥
nevver:

Forever
77174 ♥
240039 ♥
kateoplis:

Chapel of St. Kinga in Wieliczka Salt Mine, Poland
Before going down into the dark, many miners pray. (So would you.) It’s not uncommon for them to build chapels in the caverns they create, and the workers in this Polish salt mine took that task seriously, carving a 10,400-square-foot chapel into the crystalline walls. Józef Markowski started work on this particular chamber in 1896, handing it off to his brother Tomasz in 1920. Nearly everything in the room—from the chandeliers to the bas-reliefs—is carved out of rock salt. Wieliczka, which was a working mine from the 13th century until 1996, holds some 2,000 excavation chambers on nine underground levels, many decorated by miners with carvings and chapels dedicated to saints—and to those who lost their lives digging sodium chloride out of the earth.
381 ♥
91025 ♥
131129 ♥
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Older →