I make mistakes, I am out of control, and at times hard to handle, but if you can’t handle me at my worst, you sure as hell don’t deserve me at my best. And just so you know, my best is still really bad and you will totally regret dealing with the terrible parts of who I am only to be rewarded with the really bad parts of who I am. I am awful and you are stupid for putting up with me. 

(via etrangere)



apolloablaze:

ah yes…. the smell of victory

apolloablaze:

ah yes…. the smell of victory




buzzfeeddiy:

ayabug:

I LOVE MR. ROGERS.

DIY your life <3

(via theroyalbluths)


meredithfay:

nprfreshair:

Patricia Volk tells Terry Gross about how Elsa Schiaparelli changed women’s underwear:

Women’s underwear before World War II was kind of elaborate. It was usually made of silk and it had pleats and it had to be ironed. This was in France. There was no such thing as ‘drip dry’ and when the war started, most of the men went to the front and the women had to take jobs. There was gas rationing and so everybody had bicycles and you had to be licensed to ride a bike in Paris and in one year bike licenses tripled: it went up to 11 million. The way women dressed with these long skirts and this very elaborate underwear didn’t lend itself to riding a bike so Schiap changed panties completely. First of all, there was famine, so she got rid of the buttons and put elastic in the waist so that as you were losing weight, your panties would stay on. Then, she made them out of drip-dry material, so you didn’t need a maid to iron them … and she added a double-slung crotch and suddenly women could ride their bikes with a lot more freedom.

Image via Vintage Everyday

Cycling revolutionized comfortable underwear. THANKS, BIKES.Oh, and Nazis and rations. Alright, this went downhill. 

meredithfay:

nprfreshair:

Patricia Volk tells Terry Gross about how Elsa Schiaparelli changed women’s underwear:

Women’s underwear before World War II was kind of elaborate. It was usually made of silk and it had pleats and it had to be ironed. This was in France. There was no such thing as ‘drip dry’ and when the war started, most of the men went to the front and the women had to take jobs. There was gas rationing and so everybody had bicycles and you had to be licensed to ride a bike in Paris and in one year bike licenses tripled: it went up to 11 million. The way women dressed with these long skirts and this very elaborate underwear didn’t lend itself to riding a bike so Schiap changed panties completely. First of all, there was famine, so she got rid of the buttons and put elastic in the waist so that as you were losing weight, your panties would stay on. Then, she made them out of drip-dry material, so you didn’t need a maid to iron them … and she added a double-slung crotch and suddenly women could ride their bikes with a lot more freedom.

Image via Vintage Everyday

Cycling revolutionized comfortable underwear. THANKS, BIKES.Oh, and Nazis and rations. Alright, this went downhill. 



(via natashakills)


(via fit-choice)