Can we make knee high converse a thing again??? PLEASE
Light Falloff
This artwork is a tribute to nostalgia— a gentle reflection of a time and place that shaped a golden childhood.
This old building holds the soul of simpler days, where laughter echoed through cozy rooms and the scent of home-cooked meals drifted from the kitchen. It was a world filled with video games, board games, and birthday candles glowing with joy.
Homework felt like a shared adventure, not a chore, and the hum of the TV, with its clunky antenna, was the soundtrack of peaceful evenings.
Neighbors were more like extended family, and safety was so deeply felt that locked doors were almost an afterthought—only discovered to be broken the day we were leaving town.
This is more than a building; it is a memory made of warmth, innocence, and the quiet magic of being home.
Alley - Lijiang, 2019
redraw of this :P
Cute swimsuit babe I made back in January! Time to share her here :3c 💖✨
I think she got the wrong path this time....
Made in China (Wereldmusuem, Rotterdam) - Li Xiaofeng.
Li Xiaofeng uses shards of found porcelain to assemble striking garments, from haute couture to traditional Chinese dress to military uniforms. His meticulously constructed pieces combine sculpture and sewing. Xiaofeng’s work The Weight of the Millennium (2015), a blue-and-white dress fashioned from fragments of plates, bowls, and other dinnerware, was a crowd favorite at the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2015 blockbuster exhibition “China: Through the Looking Glass.” Made of porcelain from the Ming and Qing dynasties, this piece reflects Li’s interest in the long, complex history of this export commodity, whose forms and patterns are traces of globalization. For Li, porcelain remains a potent cultural symbol ripe for exploring themes concerning desire, value, and the circulation of materials.