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Posts by Graveyard Dandelion

i will weep

22 hours ago 1 0 0 0

This Is Just To Say

I have turned off
the AI features
that were in
the update

and which
you were probably
hoping
to monetize

Fuck you
they were stupid
so unnecessary
and so annoying

1 day ago 8097 2934 60 56
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Tŷ Du or Newland Maenhir
#StandingStoneSunday

2 days ago 12 4 0 0
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from reddit via the other place. 🏇☕️

2 days ago 2 0 1 0

🥺 they’re so precious

3 days ago 1 0 0 0

she’s so beautiful

4 days ago 2 0 1 0

i hear sometimes warehouses catch fire

1 week ago 1 0 0 0
A very stocky Exmoor Horn ram.

A very stocky Exmoor Horn ram.

Happy 8th anniversary to the tweet that changed us forever. Look at this absolute unit.

1 week ago 7438 1361 77 86
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But I'll burn every bridge that I cross
To find some beautiful place to get lost...

-Elliott Smith

1 week ago 186 22 3 0
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daydreaming about restoring an old victorian house next to the quaker cemetery

1 week ago 6 0 0 0
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Where are my fellow treehuggers?🌳
Let me introduce you to the ancient woodland, known as Ty Canol, in Pembrokeshire.
#trees

1 week ago 2104 209 68 13

🤞🏻🤞🏻🤞🏻

2 weeks ago 2 0 0 0

i welcome our new overlords

2 weeks ago 3 0 0 0

weird specific observation- in a world where everything is getting more and more expensive, the one thing that is getting cheaper and more widely available is the aesthetic cat tree. cat owners were an untapped market and someone finally noticed. too bad i already paid too much for a mediocre one

2 weeks ago 5 1 1 0
A horse engine or gin. It consists of a drum to which is fixed a rope that is turned by a beam that was attached to a horse via a harness. The horse used to wind the rope by walking in a circle on a paved path. The apparatus is built under a thatched roof made with timbers reused from older structures.

A horse engine or gin. It consists of a drum to which is fixed a rope that is turned by a beam that was attached to a horse via a harness. The horse used to wind the rope by walking in a circle on a paved path. The apparatus is built under a thatched roof made with timbers reused from older structures.

A horse gin in Kent. With its own little house made of reused timber, possibly from the nearby 13th century house that was rebuilt at about the same time as the horse gin was installed to raise water from a well.

#ArchitecturalIllustration
#pencil #drawing
#ArtShare

2 weeks ago 147 27 1 2

proves money can’t buy taste. paying to look worse is certainly an interesting choice

2 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

i knew you’d have thoughts on the housewives haha

2 weeks ago 1 0 1 0

Hey! You! You're probably not looking at enough art! I've made this to help you out. bsky.app/profile/did:...

(You should also follow the artists, and buy their artwork from them directly, or support them on patreon etc because that's a very cool thing to do.)

3 weeks ago 8 6 0 0
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A whitewashed, sturdy looking stone entrance into a small room of worship.

A whitewashed, sturdy looking stone entrance into a small room of worship.

St.Wilfrid's Crypt at Ripon Cathedral.

Built in 672, the oldest built structure in any English Cathedral.

3 weeks ago 494 62 4 0
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Today’s Daily Cartoon, by Ivan Ehlers.

4 weeks ago 4566 974 21 10

smart, yeah that’s safer

1 month ago 1 0 0 0
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i saw this the other day and thought of you

1 month ago 2 0 1 0
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'Blackbirds & Ravens' contemporary ceramic sculpture by Kathleen Sukiennik

1 month ago 327 57 0 4
The so-called 'Green Caesar' portrait. There are no surviving portrait statues of Julius Caesar created during his lifetime (100-44 BC), although coins bearing his likeness provide reliable evidence for his appearance. All extant sculptures are posthumous, dating from the time of the Julio-Claudian emperors who honored him as the founder of the dynasty. This extraordinary. over-life-size example is carved from graywacke, a hard sandstone that was quarried at Wadi Hammamat in the Eastern Desert of Egypt and was long used for Egyptian sculptures.

Romano-Egyptian, probably made in Alexandria, Egypt, ca. 30 BCE - 25 CE. Graywacke.

Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Antikensammlung, SK 342

The so-called 'Green Caesar' portrait. There are no surviving portrait statues of Julius Caesar created during his lifetime (100-44 BC), although coins bearing his likeness provide reliable evidence for his appearance. All extant sculptures are posthumous, dating from the time of the Julio-Claudian emperors who honored him as the founder of the dynasty. This extraordinary. over-life-size example is carved from graywacke, a hard sandstone that was quarried at Wadi Hammamat in the Eastern Desert of Egypt and was long used for Egyptian sculptures. Romano-Egyptian, probably made in Alexandria, Egypt, ca. 30 BCE - 25 CE. Graywacke. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Antikensammlung, SK 342

The Ides of March denarius, issued by Marcus Junius Brutus, is one of the most famous and historic coins ever minted. It commemorates the assassination of Julius Caesar on March 15, 44 BCE, an event that later inspired many works of art, literature, opera, and film. Caesar had declared himself "perpetual dictator" at the beginning of that year, thereby directly prompting the assassination plot by Brutus and a group of other senators who feared for the survival of the Republic under his tyrannical rule. The reverse of the coin shown here not only bears the inscription naming the day of the murder but also depicts two daggers representing the weapons used to stab Caesar to death, as well as a cap usually worn by slaves who had earned their freedom, symbolizing here the liberation of Rome. 

Inscription: BRVT IMP L PLAET CEST (Brutus, Imperator, Lucius Plaetorius Cestianus), head of Brutus, EID MAR (Ides of March), pileus (felt cap symbolizing liberty), and two pugio-style daggers, which were associated with the Roman military.

Rome, 43-42 BCE. 

Met Museum (L.2012.74, (ANS 1001.1.24742 Private collection, on loan to the American Numismatic Society)

The Ides of March denarius, issued by Marcus Junius Brutus, is one of the most famous and historic coins ever minted. It commemorates the assassination of Julius Caesar on March 15, 44 BCE, an event that later inspired many works of art, literature, opera, and film. Caesar had declared himself "perpetual dictator" at the beginning of that year, thereby directly prompting the assassination plot by Brutus and a group of other senators who feared for the survival of the Republic under his tyrannical rule. The reverse of the coin shown here not only bears the inscription naming the day of the murder but also depicts two daggers representing the weapons used to stab Caesar to death, as well as a cap usually worn by slaves who had earned their freedom, symbolizing here the liberation of Rome. Inscription: BRVT IMP L PLAET CEST (Brutus, Imperator, Lucius Plaetorius Cestianus), head of Brutus, EID MAR (Ides of March), pileus (felt cap symbolizing liberty), and two pugio-style daggers, which were associated with the Roman military. Rome, 43-42 BCE. Met Museum (L.2012.74, (ANS 1001.1.24742 Private collection, on loan to the American Numismatic Society)

Happy (?) Ides of March to all those who celebrate. It was on this date in 44 BCE that several members of the Roman senate objected to Julius Caesar having declared himself Dictator perpetuo (‘Dictator in perpetuity’) in the strongest possible terms (*stab, stab*). 🔪 🏺 1/ #IdesofMarch

📸 me

1 month ago 287 71 21 7
Florence Welch, in the Criterion Closet, talking about Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, saying "medieval, vampire, witchcraft".

Florence Welch, in the Criterion Closet, talking about Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, saying "medieval, vampire, witchcraft".

The three genders.

1 month ago 10 6 1 0

THANK YOU

1 month ago 2 0 1 0

mission accomplished 🙌🏻 thank you :)

1 month ago 2 0 0 0

now i really want someone to call me duck

1 month ago 2 0 2 0
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i’m the other unemployed friend who decided i couldn’t afford $25 for art garfunkel

1 month ago 3 0 0 0

the feminine urge to tragically, romantically drown here.

in a shakespearean way, not in a scary way

1 month ago 10 1 1 0