minutia-r:

fallynleaf:

mizufae replied to your

photoset:

no one tagged me, but i wanted to post six selfies…

that hair… HOW YOU DO THAT HAIR PLZ TEACH

😀

Buckle in, because this is going to be a LONG post. And I’m going to talk about BOG MUMMIES.

For reference, the hair in question:

image

This updo was actually what convinced me to grow my hair long in the first place (back in ye old 2008), and it has been strongly influential in my personal aesthetic ever since.

The story starts in 1938. Actually, it starts even earlier than that. In ~280 B.C., a woman died, and her body was placed in a bog, where it stayed until it was discovered in 1938, so well-preserved that the hair was still there.

This bog mummy is referred to as the Elling Woman. Here’s a bit about her.

The article talks a bit about her hair, but it’s kind of an unsatisfactory description. I found out about it when the article reached the Long Hair Community Forum in 2008, resulting in a 40-page (and counting!) thread wherein a bunch of long-haired women figured out how to recreate the hairstyle.

The ladies of LHC looked at the images of the hair, and were like: “Yep, that’s a rope braid.” “Here’s how you could do a 7-strand braid with 2-3-2 sections.” Etc. And basically, they tested out different versions, and came up with something that was cool-looking, comfortable, and practical.

Here’s the ~official~ reconstruction on the Tollund Man website:

image

And here’s a (very confusing) diagram of how the style is supposedly constructed:

image

There are several different recreations of the style floating around the LHC and youtube and the wider internet. The style also looks and works differently with different types of hair. I had to grow mine out until I could make a waist-length braid before I could really successfully do it with my hair, but my hair is medium-thick and fairly fine, so YMMV. Some people on the LHC did it with much shorter and thicker hair.

The LHC thread about it is a fun read, but it’s a bit long and meandering, and there are several conflicting sets of instructions there, so I’ll just talk about the method that I use. If you want a video aid, what I do is basically this, except I do rope braids for the bottom 2/3s instead of English braids, and I finish it by wrapping the thick braid around the middle braid, like this (I’ve never actually tried that particular method for forming the big braid, but finishing up the bun is the same).

Here’s a written description:

  1. Take the top 1/3 of your hair and braid it in a basic 3-strand braid (a.k.a. an English braid) down to a little past your neck. Tie it off so that it stays braided while you braid the rest of your hair.
  2. Separate your remaining hair into two sections (each about 1/3 of your total hair), one on the left side, and one on the right.
  3. Braid each section into a rope braid (a two-strand braid that’s made by twisting both sections in the same direction, then twisting them together in the opposite direction). Tie them off so that they stay braided. Also, I’ve found that it’s better to make the rope braids so that they’re coiled in opposite directions.
  4. Take the two rope braids, and braid them with the top/middle section of your hair that you’d braided into an English braid. You’re basically making one big English braid. After I’ve started braiding it, I slip off the elastic tie that I’d used to hold the middle braid together temporarily.
  5. Braid it as a 3-strand (that’s made up of two 2-strand rope braids, and one one-strand section that started as a 3-strand braid, so it’s sort of a 7-strand braid!) English braid all the way to the end of your hair. Take out the elastic ties around the two rope braids when you get to them.
  6. Tie the whole thing off with a single elastic tie at the end.
  7. To make the bun, you lift up the simple English braid (the one you made in step one), and you wrap the thick, complicated braid around it in a spiral.
  8. Tuck the end in as best as you can, and then secure it with whatever you want. I’ve used everything from a hair stick, a hair comb, a few bobby pins, and even a single barrette before.
  9. You’re done!

There wasn’t any evidence of any hair pins or anything like that to secure the hair found with the Elling Woman’s body. If your hair is very oiled and/or very unwashed, it might be able to hold itself in place without needing to be tied or secured. As it is, this style does work better if your hair has been oiled, or hasn’t been washed for several days.

This hairstyle is really cool for a lot of reasons, but it’s also extremely comfortable! The middle braid essentially holds the whole thing up, so you don’t experience any of the pulling you feel with some buns.

Basically, if I had to wear the same hairstyle for thousands of years, I’d definitely pick this one. It’s beautiful, versatile, comfortable, and has a really cool backstory.

@worldsentwined

Resources For Writing Sketchy Topics

eluvisen:

scorpio-skies:

wordsnstuff:

Medicine

Writing Specific Characters

Illegal Activity

Black Market Prices & Profits

Forensics

@eluvisen what timing for this to pop up on my dash! 8D

@scorpio-skies I’ll say!

copperbadge:

winds-wanderer:

archiemcphee:

Move over Thanksgiving Turkey and hello Thanksgiving Facehugger! Hellen Die of The Necro-Nom-Nom-Nomicon, the devil’s favorite chef (previously featured here), is back with a horrifically awesome main course for your holiday feasting: the The Facehugger Feast Roasted Chicken.

This monstrous main course is 100% edible. Measuring over 3 feet long, the Facehugger’s main body is made of a full-size roasted chicken, the tail is one long homemade chicken sausage, and the legs are snow crab. Hellen Die estimates it’s enough food to feed 5-6 people.

“This recipe is a bit involved. It takes a good 24 hours and includes multiple steps and a few unique ingredients, but trust me when I say, it’s so worth the effort…both visually and for how good it tastes.

Now, before we get too far into this, let me say that yes, this can absolutely be done with a turkey as well and would make the perfect show-stopping centerpiece to any Thanksgiving meal. I just didn’t have the oven space for a full turkey face hugger. Maybe next year?!”

Click here for the complete recipe and step-by-step instructions.

image

[via The Necro-Nom-Nom-Nomicon]

@copperbadge

Someday I’m gonna make this for Christmas dinner. 

an introduction to women composers

viola-and-chill:

nannerlmozartofficial:

viola-rules:

Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) from Germany
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Maddalena Casulana (1544-1590) from Italy
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Francesca Caccini (1587-1641) from Italy 
📚 Wikipedia   🎵 IMSLP
She was friend with Artmisia Gentileschi

Barbara Strozzi (1619-1977) from Italy 
📚 Wikipedia   🎵 IMSLP

Elisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre (1665-1729) from France
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Duchess Anna Amalia of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1739-1807) from Germany
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Marianna Martines (1744-1812) from Austria
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Maria Szymanowska (1789-1831) from Poland
📚Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Louise Farrenc (1804-1875) from France
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Fanny Mendelssohn [Hensel after marriage] (1805-47) from Germany
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
Sister of Felix Mandelssohn

Clara Schumann [nee Wieck] (1819-1896) from Germany
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
Married to Robert Schumann

Elfrida Andrée (1841-1929) from Sweden
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Terea Carreño (1853-1917) from Venezuela
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Cécile Chaminade (1857-1944) from France
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
She was the first female composer to be awarded the Légion d’Honneur in 1913.

Ethel Smyth (1858-1944) from England
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
Not only a suffreagette, but also a lesbian who was involved with Virginia Woolf and Violet Gordon-Woodhouse, among others

Adele aus der Ohe (1861-1937) from Germany
📚 Wikipedia    🎵IMSLP
She studied with Franz Liszt. She was friends with and performed Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto with him conducting. 

Amy Beach (1867-1944) from the USA
📚 Wikipedia    🎵IMSLP

Dora Pejačević (1885-1923) from Croatia
📚Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP

Rebacca Clarke (1886-1879) from England
📚Wikipedia   🎵IMSLP    🌀Rebecca Clarke.org
(I have access to almost all her published works, let me know if you want me to email scans of something to you)

She studied with Lionel Tertis and briefly sang under Vaughan Williams. In 1919 her Viola Sonata tied in the Berkshire Festival of Chamber Music with Ernest Bloch’s Viola Sonata. She was also friends with Frank Bridge. In 1912 she was one of the 6 female musicians allowed into the Queen’s Hall Orchestra (later became the LSO)

Florence Price (1887-1953) from the USA
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
She began studying at the New England Conservatory after she graduated high school at 14. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra premiered her Symphony No 1 in E minor on June 15, 1933, making Price’s piece the first composition by an African-American woman to be played by a major orchestra

Lili Boulanger (1893-1918) from France
📚 Wikipedia   🎵 IMSLP
She was the first woman to win the Prix de Rome when she was only 19, in 1912.

Ruth Crawford Seeger (1901-1953) from the USA
📚 Wikipedia    🎵 IMSLP
Became the first women to be granted the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1930

Elizabeth Maconchy (1907-1994) from England and Ireland
📚 Wikipedia    🌀Biography

Sofia Guabaidulina (1931-present) from Russia
📚 Wikipedia    🎼 YouTube

Joan Tower (1938-present) from the USA
📚 Wikipedia    🎼 YouTube
She has 3 Grammy Awards and and she was a member of the Da Capo Chamber Players who won the Naumberg Award.

Kaija Saariaho (1952-present) from Finland
📚 Wikipedia    🎼 YouTube

Nicole Lizée (1973-present) from Canada
🌀 Nicole Lizee.com    🌀 CMC

Cheryl Frances-Hoad (1980-present) from England
📚 Wikipedia    🌀Cheryl FrancesHoad.co.uk

Dobrinka Tabakova (1980-present) from Bulgaria 
📚 Wikipedia    🌀 Dobrinka.com

Caroline Shaw (1982-present) from the USA
📚Wikipedia    🌀Caroline Shaw.com (listen to Entre’act, I’ve played it, so GOOD!)
She won the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 2013, the youngest ever, at only 30.

Hannah Kendall (1984-present) from England & the Caribean 
📚 Wikipedia    🌀Hannah Kendall.co.uk

Fjóla Evans from Iceland & Canada
📚Fjiola Evans.com    🎼 SoundCloud

Add any other women composers that you know of to this post!

#WomenInMusic   #WomenComposers

Nannerl Mozart (1751-1829)

Wikipedia 

Sister of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

This is WONDERFUL

thearialligraphyproject:

Press Ctrl+F or ⌘F to do a quick search!

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Keep reading

azriona:

queeriesincourrier:

overclicked:

jell-o-cat:

petermorwood:

aimofdestiny:

werpiper:

aghostforafriend:

Bullshit

BRILLIANT

@petermorwood

Swords from nails are cute: for how-to reference, here’s a video.

And here are some more ex-nails.

This looks like something Terry would have given the Nac mac Feegle. (NB, must glow blue in the presence of lawyers…)

If you want something bigger, there are plenty of photos of handsome knives made from old US railroad spikes…

This one is so well-finished that it looks incomplete without a proper grip; of course a grip would conceal its origin. YMMV. Swings and roundabouts..

Not just knives…

There are even swords (with extra metal added, of course).

There’s an attractive Middle Earth Elvish look to these.

Man that first one is like swords for mice

@celeloriel I don’t know why this made me think of you, possibly b/c it’s both artful and badass ^^;

@swordlesbianopinions

@casapazzo

finish-the-clone-wars:

thefoodwiththedood:

I’ve heard from a lot of people that, when making a Star Wars OC, they get overwhelmed by the sheer amount of species and they have trouble choosing just one. So, at 3am about a week ago, I had the idea to put together a flowchart to help make that decision easier! I picked out 75 different species, both the well-known and the more obscure from both canon and legends, and grouped them by everything from the shape of their horns to the number of arms they have. I tried my best to have it be coherent and make sense, so hopefully there’s some use for it!

Links to info and (for some) videos showing off the species are below the cut. Some species have less than others to go off of, so I apologize in advance if I can’t find much. Hope this helps, though! 😀

Keep reading

Since deciding species for Star Wars OCs is stupid hard (there’s just way to many to choose from), I made this to help narrow down some options! It’s not really fanart—or even very artsy, for that matter—but maybe someone will get some use out of it nonetheless! 😀

– Submitted by @thefoodwiththedood

Thank you so much for this!