(Reblogged from spumonis)
If you were mine, I’d kiss your ankles and neck and the tip of your nose. I’d bring you film canisters filled with love notes and interesting books and I’d send you texts with random facts whenever I discovered something new. I’d show up at your house at midnight with a pot of your favourite kind of tea and a blanket and tell you to come down so we could lie down on your lawn and look at the stars. I’d go into the city with you and throw away your map and search for someplace beautiful. I’d photograph you every day. I’d buy you baggy t-shirts and sing to you constantly. I’d give you your space if you wanted it, I’d make you mixes for every week we’d been together, I’d hold your hand underwater, and I’d love you until you asked me not to.
Camryn Pulasky (via black-wolves)
(Reblogged from black-wolves)

picquaint:

approaching shadow | fan ho. 1954.

(Reblogged from picquaint)

joelzimmer:

Tower / Reflect

(Reblogged from black-and-white)
(Reblogged from scinti1la)
black and white.

black and white.

(Source: black-and-white)

(Reblogged from black-and-white)
she will be…

she will be…

(Reblogged from black-and-white)
yes everything gonna be ok..

yes everything gonna be ok..

(Reblogged from scinti1la)
(Reblogged from spumonis)

thiscertainlyisa:

This is the Green Lake in Tragoess, Styria, which sits at the foot of snow-capped Hochschwab mountains.

Throughout the frozen winter months the area is almost completely dry and is used as a county park. It is a particular favourite site for hikers. 

But as soon as the temperatures begin to rise in spring, the ice and snow on the mountaintops begins to melt and runs down into the basin of land below. 

The park fills up with ice-cold crystal clear water, which gets its distinctive green colouring from the grass and foliage beneath.

The water levels rise from about one or two metres deep in the winter to as much as 10 metres in the late spring and early summer.

The waters are at their highest in June when it becomes a mecca for divers keen to explore the rare phenomenon, before the waters recede at the end of July.

(Reblogged from thiscertainlyisa)