god is a verb, david a. cooper
Vtg King Solomons Finds Art Glass Sterling Overlay Perfume BottleDauber Israel ebay grlpwr88
interiors in Genova, February 2018
4th century CE Roman amber pins, found in 2020 at the feet of an individual who was buried in a large sarcophagus at a necropolis in the French city of Autun.
These are stunning pins, crafted with exquisite attention to detail and symmetry…but what’s even more clever about them is the material they are made out of.
Amber is ever so slightly “sticky” as a surface (which makes sense, since it’s age-hardened sap / resin). It can be polished until it’s virtuall glass-smooth, but when tucked into hair, or into the fibers of a woven garment, it will have just a tiny bit more friction, causing them to have that much more of a chance to remain in place. As a material for securing things, they are slightly better than metal and bone, if not quite as good as wood (which has a great deal of microscopic texture for hair, etc, to catch on and cling to).
Most forms of amber are very clouded from inclusions when it was still sap, and fractal from the pressures it underwent as it hardened over the aeons. To be able to find pieces as large and clear as these are makes them all the more rare. Unlike metal or bone (and somewhat like wood) these pins would feel warmer to the touch, and be more comfortable and comforting for the owner, while being less fragile than wood. And lastly, amber does have a faint scent as it warms up, making them a natural perfume source.
These are not cheap throwaway objects, folks. These are indeed treasured posessions, just as much for their functionality & multi-use offerings as for their rarity and beauty.
solid perfume necklace in the shape of a mussel from estée lauder, 1974
de Gournay wallpapers
Juha Soisalo (1941-2016) — Evening Dance (oil on canvas, 1990)
Juha Soisalo
Juha Soisalo, Composition, 1991 •
Czesław Miłosz, from “In Common” (tr. Czesław Miłosz & Robert Hass), New and Collected Poems: 1931-2001 [transcript in ALT]
crying and dying
“They embraced, their two hearts thudding like fists on the opposite sides of a bolted door.”
— Sarah Waters, The Paying Guests, 2014
Pendants made from broken china by MaroonedJewelry.
bottle. 05
René Lalique (French, 1860 – 1945)
Vase “Fishes”, N/D
Glass
Tinder founder Sean Rad’s home and office, Los Angeles, California | Photo by Sam Frost





