OMOOOOO MY SHIP IS SAILING~~~~~~ ♥♥♥♥ AIGOOOOOOO HAHAHAHAHA
(Source: ajikto)
I swear to god Lee Joon makes the perfect model. His poses are excellent references!
(Source: joonaddict)
2NE1 maknae rappers CL & Minzy: GD & TOP in the making
it’s a YG thing.
Oh my MinGD. <33333
And now for some hats :D
1) Hat
Date: early 1890s; Culture: American or European; Medium: [no medium available]
2) Hat, H. O’Neill & Co. (American)
Date: ca. 1890; Culture: American; Medium: straw, silk
3) Hat
Date: ca. 1886; Culture: American; Medium: straw
4) Hat, Mlle. Louise
Date: ca. 1890; Culture: American; Medium: bast fiber, cotton, birds, feathers
5) Hat
Date: 1863–65; Culture: French; Medium: straw
6) Hat
Date: fourth quarter 19th century; Culture: Mexican (probably); Medium: silk, metal
7) Hat
Date: 1870s; Culture: American; Medium: cotton, silk, feathers
8) Hat
Date: ca. 1891; Culture: American; Medium: [no medium available]
9) Hat
Date: 1897; Culture: American; Medium: silk, feathers
10) Hat
Date: 1890–95; Culture: American or European; Medium: straw, silk
Wild Jungle Fowl (Gallus gallus)
by Zoe Gautier
Gallus gallus is native to Southern Asia, particularly the jungles of India.This species spread all over the world when people domesticated it (the animal we refer to as the “chicken”). This account primarily discusses the wild species. It lives in thick secondary forest or lush belukar. In the morning or evening, the bird can be found in an open area by wide earthen tracts or clearing, where the it finds food.
Gallus gallus has very distinctive social system involving a pecking order, with one dominating all, and one submitting to all. There is one pecking order for female and one for male. This animal is an omnivore (herbivore and insectivore). They eat corn, soybean, worms, grass, and different kinds of grains found on the ground. Gallus gallus can live up to ten years. The molting process, taking the old feathers and putting new ones on, for an adult, takes about three to four months every year. The memory of the red junglefowl is very short…
(read more: Animal Diversity Web) (photo: David Blank)