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let’s go out today.

Smoking at The Krazy Kat Klub, a bohemian hangout, in a treehouse, in Washington DC. These pictures are from 1921. In 1919 the Washington Post described it as, “something like a Greenwich Village coffee house, in an alley near Thomas Circle”. 

let’s go out today.

Smoking at The Krazy Kat Klub, a bohemian hangout, in a treehouse, in Washington DC. These pictures are from 1921. In 1919 the Washington Post described it as, “something like a Greenwich Village coffee house, in an alley near Thomas Circle”. 

Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari

pretty much.

let’s hang.

let’s hang.

Gary Cooper with his wife Rocky, 1930s [via wehadfacesthen]

Gary Cooper with his wife Rocky, 1930s [via wehadfacesthen]

the new apartment is a lot like this. you should probably come over.

the new apartment is a lot like this. you should probably come over.

let’s hang.

Mildred Davis and Harold Lloyd - Publicity photo for “Number Please?” (1920)

let’s hang.

Mildred Davis and Harold Lloyd - Publicity photo for “Number Please?” (1920)

I’m not typically into Elvis Presley but this shirt is just!!

I’m not typically into Elvis Presley but this shirt is just!!

lawrence and vivian.

lawrence and vivian.

let’s hang.

Harold Lloyd……The Kid Brother - (1927)

let’s hang.

Harold Lloyd……The Kid Brother - (1927)

this is what dreams are made of/how do i join this.

1953
Seattle, Washington. Members of the Seattle Tubing Society in full float.
(via Burt Glinn and dreams like that)

this is what dreams are made of/how do i join this.

1953

Seattle, Washington. Members of the Seattle Tubing Society in full float.

(via Burt Glinn and dreams like that)

geneparade:

In the 19th Century having a photograph taken was a lengthy process. Frustrated by the difficulties of getting children to sit still long enough to snap a proper photo, photographers in the 1800’s conceived of a technique called “The Hidden Mother”. Draping a sheet over the mothers head in an attempt to camouflage her as a part of the furniture to better emphasize the child, the mother was then able to hold her infant and keep them still long enough for the camera to get an exposure. Vintage photographs already have a eerie feel to them, but these images of moms as cloaked phantoms take the creep factor to the next level.

Shirley MacLaine in What a Way to Go!  (1964)

dreams.

dreams.