(Source: weheartit.com, via hugjobs)
(Source: weheartit.com, via hugjobs)
(via kcapalbo)
I want to live here!!!
(Source: dkmcs)
you can’t see the bags under peoples eyes when you’re looking up at them.
maybe that’s why we used to think our parents were perfect?
The year is 2042. “I was born in the wrong generation” a teenage white girl sighs as she listens to One Direction and cleans the lens on her vintage iPhone 4S.
(via hellodearestfriend)
(by anne symons)
(via zamisliti)
Hope. It is the only thing stronger than fear.
(via wecouldonlywhisper)
i dream of a world where we keep fish in air filled glass bubbles
in our homes under the seas.
Beachin’
(via letmehavewingssoicanfly)
Superheroics and Sidekicks Become Metaphors for Love in ‘Girl and Boy’ [Preview]
By Laura Hudson
In Girl and Boy, the debut comic by Andrew Tunney, a heroine named Girl explores her relationship with the titular hero in a story that may or may not really be about superheroes. “We fight crime and loneliness,” says Girl as the two masked crusaders race through the streets. “I think he’s my favorite sidekick ever.” Superhero comics love to pair characters off as heroes and sidekicks (not to mention good guys and their evil counterparts), and Girl and Boy takes a look at those familiar tropes as metaphors for how certain relationships can begin to define us, and what happens to our identities (secret or otherwise) once they’re over.
This is a good sign, having a broken heart. It means we have tried for something.
(via kcapalbo)
untitled by [Anna Peters] on Flickr.
(via zamisliti)
(via zamisliti)