sekortS skooK

Hope you find a photo that inspires you, a tune that grooves you, a quote that touches you in all the right places. Anything, really.
~ Sunday, October 18 ~
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one of my dream HALLOWEEN costumes.
the only decent version i’ve found.
i still haven’t found a decent sally (The Nightmare Before Christmas)…

one of my dream HALLOWEEN costumes.

the only decent version i’ve found.

i still haven’t found a decent sally (The Nightmare Before Christmas)…

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“i got no strings to hold me down.”

“i got no strings to hold me down.”

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melting wax doll.

melting wax doll.

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baby doll.

baby doll.

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Oh…
thats got to hurt like a bitch!

Oh…

thats got to hurt like a bitch!

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can’t go wrong with MAC.

can’t go wrong with MAC.

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glow in the dark skeleton.

glow in the dark skeleton.

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yet another awesome attempt.
KILLER!

yet another awesome attempt.

KILLER!

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sickest fuckin thing i have ever seen!
i have got to do this one HALLOWEEN!

sickest fuckin thing i have ever seen!

i have got to do this one HALLOWEEN!

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this is HALLOWEEN!
this is HALLOWEEN!

this is HALLOWEEN!

this is HALLOWEEN!

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This is the Flammarion woodcut, so named because it first appeared in Camille Flammarion’s 1888 book L’Atmosphère. No one knows who created it; it’s thought to depict a medieval pilgrim who discovers the point where earth and sky meet.
Flammarion’s book itself seemed touched by magic. As the astronomer was completing a chapter on the force of the wind, a sudden gale blew the last few pages out the window and off in a whirlwind among the trees. Then a downpour started, and Flammarion gave them up as lost.
He was astonished, then, a few days later when his printer delivered the full chapter, with no pages missing.
It seems the porter who normally brought Flammarion’s proof sheets had been returning to his office when he noticed the sodden manuscript leaves on the ground. He assumed that he himself had dropped them and so had collected them and carried them to the printer without telling anyone.
“Remember,” Flammarion writes, “it was a chapter on the strange doings of the wind.” 

This is the Flammarion woodcut, so named because it first appeared in Camille Flammarion’s 1888 book L’Atmosphère. No one knows who created it; it’s thought to depict a medieval pilgrim who discovers the point where earth and sky meet.

Flammarion’s book itself seemed touched by magic. As the astronomer was completing a chapter on the force of the wind, a sudden gale blew the last few pages out the window and off in a whirlwind among the trees. Then a downpour started, and Flammarion gave them up as lost.

He was astonished, then, a few days later when his printer delivered the full chapter, with no pages missing.

It seems the porter who normally brought Flammarion’s proof sheets had been returning to his office when he noticed the sodden manuscript leaves on the ground. He assumed that he himself had dropped them and so had collected them and carried them to the printer without telling anyone.

“Remember,” Flammarion writes, “it was a chapter on the strange doings of the wind.” 

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The Simpsons’ (HALLOWEEN!!!)

The Simpsons’ (HALLOWEEN!!!)

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Oh Dita Von Teese…
by Ali Mahdavi.

Oh Dita Von Teese…

by Ali Mahdavi.

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Poe.

Poe.

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woody allen.
so retro.

woody allen.

so retro.