#rose petals

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I’ve not felt like making tea for a very long time, but recently have started to do so again! Today I made white tea blend ordered from a site called “The Tea Spot.” It has jasmine pearls and rose petals in it! I also added just a little bit of honey to it. It tastes absolutely wonderful! It has such a light, almost playful flavor, and makes me feel like energy is welling up in my body!

Unknown model for Royal Italia, 1969

Unknown model for Royal Italia, 1969


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wastelandwild:Schneeweisschen und Rosenrot illustrated by Brünhild Schlötter (Snow White and Rose Re

wastelandwild:

Schneeweisschen und Rosenrot illustrated by Brünhild Schlötter
(Snow White and Rose Red)


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 AVIVACOUTURE  AVIVACOUTURE

AVIVACOUTURE


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A Flor de Piel -  Doris Salcedo“To create A Flor de Piel, Doris Salcedo sutured together hundreds of

A Flor de Piel -  Doris Salcedo

“To create A Flor de Piel, Doris Salcedo sutured together hundreds of rose petals into a delicate shroud that undulates softly on the floor. Suspended in a state of transformation, the petals linger between life and death and are so vulnerable that they tear if touched. For Salcedo, fragility becomes the essence of the work as she sought to create an ‘image that is immaterial.’ The title is a Spanish idiomatic expression used to describe an overt display of emotions. While that meaning is lost when literally translated, the phrase a flor de piel links flowers and skin, suggesting a sensation so overwhelming that it is expressed physically through a coloring of the body’s surface.”

(source)

“A Flor de Piel looks more like flayed skin than rose petals. The piece is a large-scale blanket of what must amount to many, many thousands of petals and stitches which the press release describes – much better than I can – as ‘a shroud composed of sutured rose petals’. That word sutured seems apt. There is a sense of the bodily in its skin-like appearance and also a feeling of a surgical mending rather than a more domestic sewing together (though of course the two essentially amount to the same act).

“A blanket of rose petals sounds beautiful and gentle. Though this is undeniably beautiful, it’s a brutal beauty. The petals are stitched together but this is an unhealable wound. The feeling is more of torture than romance.”

(source)


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