A teeter-totter of inspiration, images, and imagination to express all that I'm passionate about and what makes me smile.

 

Poor Emma, when she turned eighteen, then the paparazzi just became criminals, in my view. In what other context could five men chase a woman down an alley, and it be ok?

Daniel Radcliffe 

this so needed to be said (via littlemissmutant)

I like DanRad a lot, but I’m adding this from Sienna Miller too, because dammit, it has been said, by a woman who has experienced it, and it needs to keep being said:

‘I was a 21-year-old girl and there were times when eight large men were chasing me down dark alleys — and because they had cameras it was thought to be alright.’ 

(via littlegiddy)

(Source: watsonlove)

game-of-style:

Meera Reed - Bally fall/winter 2013-14

Hurrah for strong, fierce, mountain-climbing mule girl!

game-of-style:

Meera Reed - Bally fall/winter 2013-14

Hurrah for strong, fierce, mountain-climbing mule girl!

Rather than fighting for every woman’s right to feel beautiful, I would like to see the return of a kind of feminism that tells women and girls everywhere that maybe it’s all right not to be pretty and perfectly well behaved. That maybe women who are plain, or large, or old, or differently abled, or who simply don’t give a damn what they look like because they’re too busy saving the world or rearranging their sock drawer, have as much right to take up space as anyone else.

I think if we want to take care of the next generation of girls we should reassure them that power, strength and character are more important than beauty and always will be, and that even if they aren’t thin and pretty, they are still worthy of respect. That feeling is the birthright of men everywhere. It’s about time we claimed it for ourselves.