(Source: muranda-izaho, via hellokah)

micasaessucasa:

(via an old farmhouse in the dutch country side | the style files)
myidealhome:

home library with ladder (via Design*Sponge)

myidealhome:

(via teachingliteracy)

(Source: imbear, via 420blackbirds)

bjorkgifs:

march

bjorkgifs:

march

(via bjorkarchive)

milksong:

littlemoons
If you’re twenty-two, physically fit, hungry to learn and be better, I urge you to travel— as far and as widely as possible. Sleep on floors if you have to. Find out how other people live and eat and cook. Learn from them— wherever you go.

mitford:

I was satisfied with haiku until I met you,
but now I want a Russian novel,
a 50-page description of you sleeping.

— D. Young

(Source: valuska, via thingssheloves)

murmurandshout:

nprfreshair:

“To keep their children from going to the fields, some parents in the 17th century would allow their daughter to sleep in the same bed as the young man courting her – but both the woman and man were tied down with heavy rope, in a practice known as ‘bundling.’” — From today’s Fresh Air, on the history of bedrooms, bathrooms and kitchens.
[Photo via weheartit]

I wrote a paper in college on the social traditions of romantic love in the US, and this practice of letting an unmarried couple sleep in the same bed but introducing all these wacky obstacles was my favorite detail.

murmurandshout:

nprfreshair:

“To keep their children from going to the fields, some parents in the 17th century would allow their daughter to sleep in the same bed as the young man courting her – but both the woman and man were tied down with heavy rope, in a practice known as ‘bundling.’” — From today’s Fresh Air, on the history of bedrooms, bathrooms and kitchens.

[Photo via weheartit]

I wrote a paper in college on the social traditions of romantic love in the US, and this practice of letting an unmarried couple sleep in the same bed but introducing all these wacky obstacles was my favorite detail.

(Source: futurastic, via heyyoshimi)