(via mererecorder)
Posts tagged art.
j.m.w. turner - morning amongst the coniston falls, cumberland, 1798
(via numenorss)
FESTER
[verb]
1. to form pus; generate purulent matter; suppurate.
2. to cause ulceration, as a foreign body in the flesh.
3. to putrefy or rot.
4. to rankle, as a feeling of resentment.
5. to cause to rankle
[noun]
6. an ulcer; a rankling sore.
7. a small, purulent, superficial sore.
Etymology: Middle English festir, festre < Anglo-French, Old French festre < Latin fistula – fistula, Middle English festryn, derivative of the noun or < Old French festrir.
(via mererecorder)
“The more they told me: you’re a girl, you can’t paint graffiti, you can’t go to subways, because you’re a girl, you’re a mere female; I had to stand up and just shut them up.” —Lady Pink
Graff feminist OG
(via mamamantis)
The inimitable Grant Snider strikes again, with the day jobs of famous poets – including Jack Kerouac (railroad worker), Charles Bukowski (mailman), Emily Dickinson (cat-keeper), and T. S. Eliot (bank clerk.)
(via christeana)
Photo Constructs
Scott Hazard tears and layers photographs to create these beautiful wormholes into other worlds.
(via caterinasforzas)


![victoriousvocabulary:
FESTER
[verb]
1. to form pus; generate purulent matter; suppurate.
2. to cause ulceration, as a foreign body in the flesh.
3. to putrefy or rot.
4. to rankle, as a feeling of resentment.
5. to cause to rankle
[noun]
6. an ulcer; a rankling sore.
7. a small, purulent, superficial sore.
Etymology: Middle English festir, festre < Anglo-French, Old French festre < Latin fistula – fistula, Middle English festryn, derivative of the noun or < Old French festrir.
[Kelly McKernan]](http://24.media.tumblr.com/4dfa0e647146384823775ab4e4be976a/tumblr_mjvuovPXjY1r47bczo1_500.jpg)


