Me after DDTWID
“Okay Hummelberry can have some rights, as a treat.”
Reblog and put in the tags: the fandom for which you read your first-ever fanfic, and which website you found it on.
NEWSIES S6 Style
Katherine Plummer: Jane Hayward
Jack Kelly: Mason McCarthy
Davey Jacobs: Skylar Warbler
Les Jacobs: Myron Muskovitz
Crutchie: Spencer Porter
Spot Conlon: Clint (Vocal Adrenaline, I know it’s not the right club I don’t care it would work really well)
Joseph Pulitzer: Rodrick Meeks
And I’m struggling with Medda Larkin but no on could pull her off but Jane, and Jane deserves to be Katherine so maybe they bring back Mercedes or Santana like they did for Grease.
All the other ensemble roles are filled by Warblers and other left over members of ND (Alistair). Kitty and Madison are both dancers in the theater scene and Kitty is Pulitzers secretatry, and Madison is the walker on the street that Jack (Mason) approaches and gets shot down by.
You know going from 247 open tabs of fanfiction to 14 tabs of fanfiction in 5 minutes is an experience that simultaneously makes you cry of sadness and happiness. Because they’re gone and you’ll probably never find them again but now that they’re gone you can finally admit to yourself that you were never going to read them anyway
Heyo! I’m back with another! This ones for you @pineappletheatrekid
Okay I have no self control and did another... this ones for you Pie! @oohbabycupcakes
OKAY SO
I may have done a thing... and by that I mean I started playing around in knockoff photoshop and started making headers for mutuals??? So like I’m definitely gonna make more and if you want one I’ll totally do it but uhh here’s the one I made for @kartieissuperior
Dumb question but if you were going to change the spelling of any Glee Character’s name (first or last) to an obnoxiously complicated version of that name who’s would it be and what would it look like?
Okay I love this question. I’m such a language nerd.
Kuhrt. Because it’s German (well, so is Kurt (the name) anyways).
but my brain knowledge ends there
You said fill your inbox with cool things and I want to interact so here are a couple of weird things from my school.
1 Choir teacher 1: I drove 40 minutes to get lunch today.
Choir teacher 2: You are an animal, you’re more animal than man.
2 The time a girl was selling a 100 pack of worms on strings for 10 bucks a pop and sold out within a day. (My friend bought two and made them into earrings)
3 And
✨Bread Man✨
1, i love it and choir teacher #2 sounds like me
2, i mean i would have bought them too
3, tell me more about this mysterious/amazing sounding bread man
OKAY SO
I may have done a thing... and by that I mean I started playing around in knockoff photoshop and started making headers for mutuals??? So like I’m definitely gonna make more and if you want one I’ll totally do it but uhh here’s the one I made for @kartieissuperior
Young Parisian corset maker Sylvain Nuffer began cutting, stitching and boning corsets for men four years ago and now sells 30-odd standard models a year at 500 to 600 euros (650 to 775 dollars) a shot, 40 percent more when made to measure.
“I felt frustrated by the lack of choice of clothing for men,” he told AFP. “I made one for myself and they kind of multiplied.”
Wearing jeans with a gray silk corset of his own making over a shirt and tie, Nuffer, who learnt the complex trade with his corsetiere mother, stands tall, waist nipped in, shoulders wide, back straight.
Corsets for men have a history, he said, worn by medieval horsemen to protect the spine, adopted by bikers today for the same reason.
But the real inspiration behind Nuffer’s corset - laced up the back with a clip-open busk at the front - dates back to the heady days of the 1789 French Revolution.
Male followers of utopian philosopher and economist, Count Claude Henri de Saint-Simon, at the time adopted the corset precisely because it was impossible to lace up alone. Having to help each other with the ties symbolised the humanitarian helping-other ideals of the Saint-Simonien movement.
Critics derided Nuffer’s early creations, however, saying a garment stiffened with a multitude of bones and stays would be uncomfortable.
Not so, said one adept, Laurent Renaud, who teaches at a fashion school and wears his everyday. “I wear it over a shirt or under a sweater,” he said. “I use it as daywear or to go out at night.”
“The problem,” he added, “is you get so used to it keeping you straight that it gets difficult to go without.”
(source)