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Jassamine's board

@impossiblecheesecakemagazine

Kisses

Showing affections.

  1. goodnight kisses
  2. hand kisses
  3. smiling while kissing
  4. lips barely touching
  5. morning kisses
  6. slow kisses
  7. passionate kisses
  8. kisses on the cheek
  9. first kisses
  10. goodbye kisses
  11. welcome home kisses
  12. kisses on the corner of their mouth
  13. frustrated kisses
  14. kissing each other breathless
  15. soothing kisses
  16. nose kisses
  17. kisses as a promise
  18. short pecks
  19. forehead kisses
  20. kisses on head
  21. “we’ll face this together” kisses
  22. kisses in the rain
  23. life-or-death kisses
  24. kisses for a cover
  25. hard kisses
  26. giggling while kissing
  27. desperate kisses
  28. neck kisses
  29. hushed conversation in-between kisses
  30. eyelid kisses
  31. gentle stroking of cheeks
  32. small kisses
  33. kissing it better
  34. jaw kisses
  35. wake-up kisses
  36. kissing away tears
  37. public kisses
  38. relieved kisses
  39. kisses for comfort
  40. tummy kisses
  41. kisses to shut them up
  42. slowly kissing down the body
  43. “we’ll see each other again” kisses
  44. kissing each finger
  45. sleepy kisses
  46. angry kisses
  47. feather-light kisses
  48. kisses with trembling lips
  49. secret kisses
  50. kisses with their last dying breath

Dean is standing there like a female does when they know their man is about to whoop whose ever ass disrespected you.

Roman: “Which one did it?”

Dean: “I dunno, don’t remember. Whoop all their asses.”

Roman: *as he points at the suspects* “Eeny, meeny, miny, mo”

Rare Photos of Black Rosie the Riveters

During World War II, 600,000 African-American women entered the wartime workforce. Previously, black women’s work in the United States was largely limited to domestic service and agricultural work, and wartime industries meant new and better-paying opportunities – if they made it through the hiring process, that is. White women were the targets of the U.S. government’s propaganda efforts, as embodied in the lasting and lauded image of Rosie the Riveter.Though largely ignored in America’s popular history of World War II, black women’s important contributions in World War II factories, which weren’t always so welcoming, are stunningly captured in these comparably rare snapshots of black Rosie the Riveters.

Reblogging because I’ve never seen these before, and I bet a lot of people haven’t. 

My great grandma was a bomb builder in Cleveland. There’s a restaurant in the city, near the airport, called 101st Bombardiers (I think) that we went to after her funeral. We got into a conversation with the owner about how she specifically wanted us all to go there, and the owner called up the previous owner, her mother, who showed up and told us tales about my grandmother from back when they worked together. I don’t know if there were any women of color they worked with, but knowing my grandmother they would have been fast friends.