TumblrPics.com
HOME
DMCA
Live
Gallery
Viewer
The 1920s
hornymormonbearut
izzistudies
rumpypumpyy
opiopharmacist
amaretdx 栗原玉藻
LIVE
And they, so perfect in their misery,Not once perceive their foul disfigurement,But boast themselves
thefuzzydave:Hand-carved hearse, 1920s
zynab1929:1920s compact purses - girls would carry their powder, rouge and/or lipstick sometimes in
Munsell’s Color Tree, from A Grammar of Color, 1921. By Thomas Cleland. The Strathmore paper c
Hungarian-inspired theatre costume coat by Jacques doucet, 1910-1925
xshayarsha:From Carl Theodor Dreyer’s The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
“Dancer” by Janos Vaszary, c. 1925
thekimonogallery:Boy’s winter kimono. Taishoperiod (1912-1926), Japan. A young boy’s padded silk ki
Theo Ballmer, cover of the Exhibition Booklet “Photography / Hundert Jahre Lichtbild”, 1927. Gewerbe
American sailors and their guide, Peking (Beijing), 1924.
gwuscrc:A spooky Jewish story: Pictured above are Yiddish and English editions of S. Anski’s (1863-1
Stacia Napierkowska in “L'Atlantide”, 1921
Johannes Itten and his chart for teaching color theory at the Bauhaus Weimar: Farbenkugel in 7 Licht
squeetothegee:theflapperfactor:Your Digital Flapper DictionaryTerms and Useful Phrases That’s bullsh
“Theatre Costume, Sin, Impératrice de Chine” designed by Madame Louise Chéruit; illustra
Another (fake) Detroit 1920s prohibition Assassin’s Creed idea. cant stop me now, guys.The lobby of
another(fake) Detroit 1920s prohibition Assassin’s Creed idea.Fox Theatre lobby! Now in color! scout
More (fake) Detroit 1920s prohibition Assassin’s Creed ideas. The Fox Theater is one of my favorite
The Flu.Illustration by Thomas Theodor Heine for Simplicissimus, 1929.Debauchery, decadence, chaotic
thehystericalsociety:Bent over backwards - c. 1920s - (Via)
thehystericalsociety:Checkered - c. 1920s - (Via)
Fair Judge.Illustration by Thomas Theodor Heine for Simplicissimus, 1928.
Rebellious girls in the 1920s wanted to anger and shock their Victorian-era parents, so not only wou
Tänzerin Nina PayneAtelier Willinger :: Bewegungsstudie der Tänzerin Nina Payne, 1920s.| src Theater
Prev Page
Next Page