Oh for the love of god. Could they be any cuter? I just love that Robb Stark (even though people think it’s only because Richard Madden kind of looks like Brandon).
(via fuckyeahwinterfell)
Source: punkylana

“Marine” Gustave Courbet
I’ll affect you slowly
as if you were having
a picnic in a dream.
There will be no ants.
It won’t rain.
-Richard Brautigan
My favorite poem. Ever. And the painting I always think of when reading it.
I’m not usually super sentimental when it comes to every day stuff.
(that’s a lie)
But there’s just something about having a husband watch you work, and seeing that he’s so proud of you, that makes me think being married is pretty awesome.
I mean… I know I’ve worked really hard to get where I am. And I always hope that, one day, the editor of Glamour, or Vogue, or Rolling Stone will recognize that hard work and be just DESPERATE to hire me. And still, I couldn’t help but feel proud of myself tonight when I looked across a room full of the “who’s who” in Chicago press (while I was shaking in my boots about to interview a local celeb), and saw my husband smiling at me. He seemed like the most important guy in the crowd.
And that was pretaaaay nice. A fan for life.
I’ll take it.

Wish I could be in this moment. Just can’t imagine what they are talking about or where they are headed.
Hubert de Givenchy and Audrey Hepburn
Source: awesomepeoplehangingouttogether
Haberdashery


Brandon was really in his element last night. Even though I was technically “working” at the Haberdash lookbook launch that I helped promote, I still felt like I was tagging along with my husband. Haberdash is one of those places where ladies aren’t generally welcomed, and you have a “guy” (Brandon has Phil) who knows way too much about you, but last night they threw an awesome party. Great drinks, great music, great clothes, great chefs. Glad to have been a part of it!

Ever since learning about the clearing out of Carnegie Hall’s residents in 2001, I’ve been totally fascinated with the people that lived there for so long. You get a heart-wrenching taste of what the move was like for them in Bill Cunningham: New York (another doc everyone should see), but I’m really excited that someone took a deeper look into the topic. Going to check it out by myself next week at the Gene Siskel Film Center… anyone want to join?
“A sad and spirited elegy…It is staggering to contemplate how much of New York’s cultural history is contained in the square feet Mr. Astor surveys.”
—A.O. Scott, The New York Times
Since 1891, one of Manhattan’s most fascinating byways was the Carnegie Hall Studios, a funky oasis of 160 artist studios built atop the concert hall by Andrew Carnegie. For over a century, it served as a haven for illustrious icons (Marlon Brando, Enrico Caruso, Barnett Newman, Isadora Duncan, Leonard Bernstein, Norman Mailer, and Bill Cunningham, to name just a few), as well as many lesser known figures equally precious to the cultural vitality of the city. When the landlord began clearing out the artists to make way for office space in 2001, photographer and 20-year resident Josef Astor started to make this film about the tenants and their fight to save their sanctuaries. LOST BOHEMIA is less a rage-against-the-machine polemic than a lovely, valedictory valentine to a unique community of artists, eccentrics, and survivors. HDCAM video. (MR)

Source: fabfitfun




