Château de Gudanes. Photo by Tim Damas
chega.
HENRY CAVILL + explaining stuff more like “Toss a coin to your teacher”
OK lads. So, in case any of you didn't know the Sunday Times just published a gloriously ridiculous interview with Orlando Bloom in which he said
"there are times when I look at a cow and think that's the most beautiful thing I've ever seen".
No. Really.
This just got me thinking, that's a very legolas thing to say. Here me out: we see in the Hobbit (movie version) that the Mirkwood elves are fairly stand-offish with the rest of Middle Earth so interactions with other lands might have been fairly limited for a the first part of his life.
I like to think that when legolas was travelling with aragorn there would have been an awful lot of
"what's that?!"
"that's a pig legolas"
"amazing! What's that?"
"that's a spider legolas."
"I didn't know they could still be that small! What's that?"
"that's a cow legolas."
"that's the most beautiful thing I've ever seen."
⠀⠀⠀© ❜ ﹙📂﹚g𝟒me ?⢝⠀⚠ : øv𝟑r⠀⠀(·•᷄ࡇ•᷅ ) ⌗
⠀
alexa play "nothing's gonna hurt you baby"
black & white
“It’s funny you say that, because the touchstones were part of me. I really feel a connection to Geralt and who he is and his nature, especially from the books. And having played the game for many, many, many hours, it was something that I had a connection with. And so it was just about bringing a version of me, which is a version of Geralt, into Lauren’s show.”
THE WITCHER NETFLIX APPRECIATION WEEK Day Five/Favorite Cast Member ⇒ HENRY CAVILL
meu deus que LINDA
Details of Portrait of Pauline Hübner, née Bendemann, 1829, by Julius Hübner (1806-1882)
Self-portrait paintings ; Albrecht Dürer, Raphael, Sofonisba Anguissola, Rembrandt, Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun, William Turner, Gustave Courbet, Vincent van Gogh
to triste
ALADDIN (1992) FROZEN II (2019) HERCULES (1997) 101 DALMATIANS (1961) THE LITTLE MERMAID (1989) BEAUTY AND THE BEAST (1991) THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG (2009) SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS (1937)
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If grandmothers around the world had a rallying cry, it would probably sound something like “You need to eat!”
Photographer Gabriele Galimberti’s grandmother said something similar to him before one of his many globetrotting work trips. To ensure he had at least one good meal, she prepared for him a dish of ravioli before he departed on one of his adventures.
“In that occasion I said to my grandma ‘You know, Grandma, there are many other grandmas around the world and most of them are really good cooks,” Galimberti wrote via email. “I’m going to meet them and ask them to cook for me so I can show you that you don’t have to be worried for me and the food that I will eat!’ This is the way my project was born!”
The project, “Delicatessen With Love”, took Galimberti to 58 countries where he photographed grandmothers with both the ingredients and finished signature dishes.
He acted as photographer and stylist during each shoot with the grandmothers, taking a portrait of both the women and the food they made for him.
From top to bottom:
Inara Runtule, 68, Kekava, Latvia. Silke (herring with potatoes and cottage cheese). Grace Estibero, 82, Mumbai, India. Chicken vindaloo.
Susann Soresen, 81, Homer, Alaska. Moose steak.
Serette Charles, 63, Saint-Jean du Sud, Haiti. Lambi in creole sauce.
The photographer’s grandmother Marisa Batini, 80, Castiglion Fiorentino, Italy. Swiss chard and ricotta Ravioli with meat sauce.
Normita Sambu Arap, 65, Oltepessi (Masaai Mara), Kenya. Mboga and orgali (white corn polenta with vegetables and goat).
Julia Enaigua, 71, La Paz, Bolivia. Queso Humacha (vegetables and fresh cheese soup).
Fifi Makhmer, 62, Cairo, Egypt. Kuoshry (pasta, rice and legumes pie).
Isolina Perez De Vargas, 83, Mendoza, Argentina. Asado criollo (mixed meats barbecue).
Bisrat Melake, 60, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Enjera with curry and vegetables.