i wanna' be just like you when i grow up

My photo
the outrageous, the whatevers, the inspired, the contriversial, the outcasts, the down right brilliant, the originalss. /////////// - "we've got to get out of this trap! Before this... decadence... saps our wills. I've got to be strong, und try to... hang on! Or else, my mind may well *snap*! Und my life... will be lived..."

Saturday, 29 January 2011

awfully tempted


blue hair?

black hair?


p.s when i die, everyone should attend my funeral looking along the lines of

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

empirical menswear.




paddy hartley






















In American Hoodoo, African-American folk magic, and New Orleans voodoo, it is used in mojo hands for money-drawing or love-drawing, and is used as incense to cleanse a space of negative entities or influences. It is also added to red ink to make "Dragon's Blood Ink", which is used to inscribe magical seals and talismans.


According to different legends the brass coils were to protect wearers from the bites of tigers in their jungle home in Karenni state, or began as a tribute to a dragon-mother progenitor. At about the age of 6, girls are allowed to choose whether or not to put them on. Wearers say that they are not uncomfortable, although their weight forces the shoulders down, making the neck look longer.