View high resolution
Before.
Epic scene reconstruction showing Quinn’s coming out process. Enjoy!
password: faberry
(You can download the video and read rambly notes here.)
Finn as lesbro is a great improvement.
(Source: huskyleopard, via mentecato)
Loneliness, Sappho (via floralnymph)
(via underdreamskies)
Solresol is an artifical language first developed by the French musician and author François Sudre beginning in 1827. Words in Solresol are composed of between one and five syllables, and the syllables used for constructing words are the seven diatonic solfège syllables which may be used in “long” or “short” versions for variation.
Each syllable has a simple meaning if used on its own, and another meaning if used after another syllable as a modifier—in this way, small words are formed. The initial syllables of a longer word define that word’s “class;” longer words beginning with sol pertain to the arts and sciences, while words beginning with solsol pertain in particular to the science of medicine. Solresol itself, for example, means “language,” while solsolredo means “headache.”
The chief novelty of Solresol is its ability to be communicated not only verbally, but through the singing of solfège and also through hand signs.
A stenographic script was developed for the language, with unique symbols for each solfège syllable combined to form words:
| france: | ten |
| france: | twenty |
| france: | thirty |
| france: | forty |
| france: | fifty |
| france: | sixty |
| france: | |
| france: | |
| france: | sixty ten |
| world: | france what are you do— |
| france: | four twenties |
| world: | france stop it |
| france: | four twenties ten |
| world: | france that doesn't even make any sense |
| france: | |
| france: | |
| france: | |
| world: | |
| france: | |
| world: | |
| france: | hundred. |
(Source: cumberbang, via areyoutryingtodeduceme)
View high resolution
Photograph of the water tower of the Old Town Mills in Prague. After her deportation to the Theresienstadt ghetto in Czechoslovakia, Helene Reik yearned to record what was happening to her. This photograph was sent to Helene, who used it as paper for her diary in Theresienstadt. Helene’s makeshift diary offers wistful memories of her husband and parents who died before the war, loving thoughts of her family who had left Europe in 1939, and a firsthand account of the illness and hospitalization that ultimately led to her death. Because resources were scarce in the Theresienstadt ghetto, Helene recorded her thoughts, recollections, and diary entries in the margins and on the backs of family pictures that she had brought with her, as well as postcards and letters she received while in the ghetto.
(via coolchicksfromhistory)