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moonlitcorner:

Joseph Wright of Derby
inthemoodforlove:

(via nevver)

moonlitcorner:

Joseph Wright of Derby

inthemoodforlove:

(via nevver)

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moonlitcorner:

ontheborderland:

Wschód księżyca (Moonrise), 1884, Stanisław Masłowski (via Wikimedia)

moonlitcorner:

ontheborderland:

Wschód księżyca (Moonrise), 1884, Stanisław Masłowski (via Wikimedia)

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moonlitcorner:

ontheborderland:

PSITHURISM n.— the sound of wind in trees or rustling leaves (via lastchatwithphontaine)

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moonlitcorner:

by isvibilsky
(via fullbloom, benjaminhilts and saintstigersloversart)

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Nailya Alexander

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moonlitcorner:

Sans Titre from the series ‘Les Nuits Etranges’Yannick Demmerle

moonlitcorner:

Sans Titre from the series ‘Les Nuits Etranges’
Yannick Demmerle

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moonlitcorner:

Paul Kozal

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Ghost Pipes

aka Indian-Pipe, Ice-Plant, Ghost-Flower, Corpse-Plant, Monotropa Uniflora.

via ann wood

“Gathered together in stiff, colourless groups of from three to a dozen or more, these strange, uncanny, waxy white  flowers hold their silent, Quaker-like meetings with bowed heads, as if awaiting the motion of some woodland spirit to arouse them. This leafless plant is known as a parasite because it draws its nourishment from other living roots and decaying vegetable matter. It is noticeably cold and clammy to the touch, and is inclined to turn black  when plucked or exposed to the sun. The Indians  used the Ice-plant for relieving affections of the eyes. The white flower stem, which grows from four to ten inches high, is thick and smooth, and springs  from a ball of matted, brittle rootlets. The stem is covered with small, scaly white bracts. The rather large, white terminal and nodding, oblong, shell-shaped flower is wax-like, scentless, and solitary.”source

Ghost Pipes

aka Indian-Pipe, Ice-Plant, Ghost-Flower, Corpse-Plant, Monotropa Uniflora.

via ann wood

“Gathered together in stiff, colourless groups of from three to a dozen or more, these strange, uncanny, waxy white flowers hold their silent, Quaker-like meetings with bowed heads, as if awaiting the motion of some woodland spirit to arouse them. This leafless plant is known as a parasite because it draws its nourishment from other living roots and decaying vegetable matter. It is noticeably cold and clammy to the touch, and is inclined to turn black when plucked or exposed to the sun. The Indians used the Ice-plant for relieving affections of the eyes. The white flower stem, which grows from four to ten inches high, is thick and smooth, and springs from a ball of matted, brittle rootlets. The stem is covered with small, scaly white bracts. The rather large, white terminal and nodding, oblong, shell-shaped flower is wax-like, scentless, and solitary.”
source

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Audrey Hepburn

Audrey Hepburn

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Katsura Villa 

via aesthete’s lament

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Katsura Villa

via aesthete’s lament

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also posted at Rooms

via vena cava

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also posted at Rooms

via vena cava

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