(via queer-ass-aurus)
- alles was mich interessiert, mir passiert -
(via queer-ass-aurus)
Source: starkidobama
SWEET FUCK HE IS NOT WEARING PANTS, I REPEAT, HE IS NOT. WEARING. PANTS.
I keep looking at the bottom of the photo hoping that there’s more below and it just hasn’t finished loading yet.
(via queer-ass-aurus)
Source: darrenstubble
(via anothercaliboy)
Source: andrewbreitel
(via loveincolororg)
Source: loveincolor.org
(via loveincolororg)
Source: loveincolor.org
(via loveincolororg)
Source: loveincolor.org
(via loveincolororg)
Source: loveincolor.org
Source: loveincolor.org
(via loveincolororg)
Source: loveincolor.org
Source: homofiction
This picture makes me oh so happy! :)
Source: loveincolor.org
Source: keeephighstayfly
Feb. 6, 2012. A Syrian man hugs his seriously wounded brother in a house used as a hospital in Bab Amr, a southern neighborhood of Homs.
Syria is no longer sliding into war or staring at the abyss of warfare. Syria is at war. On assignment for TIME this week, photographer Alessio Romenzi risked his life documenting civilian casualties in Bab Amr, a district in the besieged city of Homs.
See more here.
Source: TIME
It’s that time of year again — feast your eyes on the 2012 World Press Photo of the Year (above) by Samuel Aranda.
The winning photograph shows a woman caring for a wounded relative, inside a mosque used as a field hospital by demonstrators against the rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, during clashes in Sanaa, Yemen on October 15, 2011. Samuel Aranda was working in Yemen on assignment for The New York Times. He is represented by Corbis Images.
Read more about the winning photo — and see more of the winning images here.
Source: timelightbox
Fantastic news! TIME contract photographer James Nachtwey is being awarded the Dresden International Peace Prize tonight.
We want to know: What’s your favorite James Nachtwey photograph?
In 1994 TIME photographer James Nachtwey witnessed the devastating effects of the Rwandan genocide. Here on LightBox the photographer looks back on the tragedy. Pictured, a Hutu man who did not support the genocide had been imprisoned in the concentration camp, was starved and attacked with machetes. He managed to survive after he was freed and was placed in the care of the Red Cross, Rwanda, 1994.
Source: timelightbox