• CULTURE,  Misc.

    A Century of Black Female Beauty in 1 Minute

    There is something powerful about watching a century unfold in sixty seconds. A Century of Black Female Beauty in One Minute does exactly that, transforming makeup into a time machine and style into history. From 1910 to 2010, the video traces how Black women have shaped, resisted, and redefined beauty across generations.

  • 100-years-of-beauty-in-1-minute
    CULTURE,  FASHION

    100 Years of Beauty in 1 Minute

    Timelapsed to an interesting demonstraion. It’s amazing seeing the subtle changes in beauty styles through the latest 100 years. When all placed together the contrasting styles still retain their seperate uniquness while still maintiang the core of glamours beauty. Which is your favorite time period?

  • #makeuptransformation
    CULTURE,  Misc.

    Celebrity Makeup Transformations

    In a beauty guru and celebrity obsessed world we find everyone trying to emulate and appear like their favorite celebrities through makeup. There are many examples of this on youtube. Some makeup guru’s youtube channels are solely dedicated to using makeup to contour and become your favorite celebrity. New meme’s have popped up making complete fun of the beauty transformation process. They show how just some light highlighting and contouring can make up into the celebrity of your dreams. Check out these hilarious Makeup Transformation meme’s below. #makeuptransformation This is out of control…

  • Real Marge Simpson
    ART,  CULTURE,  Misc.

    Creepy/Awesome Real Life Marge Simpson

    There is something deeply disorienting about seeing a cartoon character translated too accurately into real life. Not a costume. Not a parody. But a living, breathing version that occupies physical space. This interpretation of Marge Simpson lands precisely in that uncanny territory, where admiration and discomfort exist side by side.

  • FASHION

    Prada Inspired by Serial Killers

    Fashion has always pulled from unexpected places. While runways are often framed as spaces of beauty and aspiration, the creative undercurrent beneath them is frequently darker, more psychological, and far less polite. Within art and popular culture, there has long been a fixation on criminals and outcasts, figures whose stories sit at the edges of society yet continue to captivate collective imagination. Music, film, and visual art have explored this territory for decades. Fashion, inevitably, followed.