pinkbowsnkittens

beautilation:

kawaiinchesters:

really old vintage photos of homosexual couples

People having a good time back in the day.

vintagegal:

French postcard c. 1927

vintagegal:

French postcard c. 1927

distraction:


A sailor and his date enjoying a day in Central Park while he is on shore leave, 1943.

nowadays all dates are in bed

distraction:

A sailor and his date enjoying a day in Central Park while he is on shore leave, 1943.

nowadays all dates are in bed

dominantlife:

Adorable!

yeoldefashion:

A 1912 photograph of women in Lucile tea apparel. This photo was featured alongside Lucile’s Her Wardrobe column in Good Housekeeping magazine.

yeoldefashion:

A 1912 photograph of women in Lucile tea apparel. This photo was featured alongside Lucile’s Her Wardrobe column in Good Housekeeping magazine.

lauramcphee:

Circus family, c1965 (Todd Walker) 

lauramcphee:

Circus family, c1965 (Todd Walker) 

letmedothis:

Hysterical Women: A Visual History of the Vibrator

Today we associate vibrators with one thing: our pleasure. In the nineteenth century, however, vibrators were only used by physicians, and served the sole medical purpose of curing hysteria—that umbrella diagnosis pushed upon difficult (read: sexually frustrated) or ailing women. At the turn of the twentieth century when these gadgets first hit the market for personal use, they weren’t advertised as having any sexual benefits. Instead, manufacturers politely and euphemistically referred to the healing qualities of personal massagers, like circulation stimulation and healthier, glowing skin.

They look like weapons from Fallout to me

maire-annatari:

The Sedlec Ossuary is a small Gothic church in the Czech Republic.  It is adorned with the bones of some 40,000 people (some say up to 70,000), most of them victims of the Black Death.

When life gives you plagues, improve your architecture.