accio:

there are three types of doctor who fans – people who just watch the new series, people who watch both new and classic who, and people who have a strong kneejerk reaction to the word loom

thebibliosphere:

I honestly have no idea who I’m following any more. Between Tumblr randomly unfollowing mutuals and the general chaos of my blog, I pretty much just look at the icon and assume Friend status based on how well I recognize it.

Does this fall through when people change their usernames/icons 10000%

I don’t actually look at my dash. I use an RSS reader and let me tell you, if someone changes their username and don’t post about it? They are gone forever unless I happen to wonder and then go look to see if I can figure out which one they are.

SOMETIMES dead usernames resurrect with new people.

Why do I do this? we just don’t know

egypt-museum:

Diadem of Princess Khenmet

A gold crown of Princess Khenmet, possibly daughter of King Amenemhat II.

She is mainly known from her unrobbed tomb containing a set of outstanding personal adornments. 

 This masterpiece was found in the tomb of Khnemet and her sister “Ita” in Dahshur. The crown is made of a network of interlaced gold wires that entangle nearly 200 small flowers, each with a carnelian eye and five turquoise-inlaid petals. The wires are tied to three pins on each side of five ‘crosses’, which are actually five clusters of lotus blossoms, and terminate at a pair of rings on the back of a sixth ‘cross’.

Middle Kingdom, 12th Dynasty, ca. 1991-1803 BC. From Princess Khenmet’s burial next to the pyramid of Amenemhat II at Dahshur. Now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

mutantapologist:

imagine breaking up with someone when you’re both in your early 20s and they take your ship and fuck off, and then you become the best dressed in the galaxy and the leader of an entire city and live in a palace. and then your ex shows up to ask a favor and he’s like 35 living in that ship and hanging out with 22 year olds and using 5-in1 soap. that’s how lando calrissian feels