Peggy Truong

multimedia journalist. photographer. storyteller.

life:

Not published in LIFE: Queen Elizabeth II in Ethiopia, 1965.
See more photos here.
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life:

Not published in LIFE: Queen Elizabeth II in Ethiopia, 1965.

See more photos here.

scottycrowe:

Gotta spend it wisely. (via BA)

scottycrowe:

Gotta spend it wisely. (via BA)

un-gif-dans-ta-gueule:


The Artist - Michel Hazanavicius

un-gif-dans-ta-gueule:

The Artist - Michel Hazanavicius

(via bbook)

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
1,191,771 Plays
'Upular' (Virtual 3D)

<3

hamburglr:

First, go grab some headphones. The best ones you’ve got. If the best ones you’ve got are these suckers (or something similar), you should really go buy new ones, but use the best you’ve got for right now.

Take a break from whatever you’re doing for 2 minutes and listen, but just listen to the whole thing, even if you have to multi-task.

Headphones on? Ok. Good.

Now, press play.


“Upular (3D Audio Version)” - Pogo

(via mattmodrowski)

life:

Over the years, LIFE’s legendary photographers enjoyed unprecedented  access to the private lives of the biggest stars in the world, watching  them as they ate their meals, played with their children, read their  books — and even tucked themselves into bed.
Here, some of the most  memorable photographs that resulted from those intimate moments.
Pictured: Her sex-symbol image aside, Monroe was an avid reader of  20th-century literature and was often photographed curling up with a  book, as in this shot taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt at her Hollywood home  in 1953.
View high resolution

life:

Over the years, LIFE’s legendary photographers enjoyed unprecedented access to the private lives of the biggest stars in the world, watching them as they ate their meals, played with their children, read their books — and even tucked themselves into bed.

Here, some of the most memorable photographs that resulted from those intimate moments.

Pictured: Her sex-symbol image aside, Monroe was an avid reader of 20th-century literature and was often photographed curling up with a book, as in this shot taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt at her Hollywood home in 1953.

life:


“I was in love with New York. I do not mean ‘love’ in any colloquial way, I mean that I was in love with the city, the way you love the first person who ever touches you and never love anyone quite that way again.”

— Joan Didion, in her essay collection Slouching Towards Bethlehem. 
(see more — Love Letter to NYC: LIFE Photos)
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life:

“I was in love with New York. I do not mean ‘love’ in any colloquial way, I mean that I was in love with the city, the way you love the first person who ever touches you and never love anyone quite that way again.”

— Joan Didion, in her essay collection Slouching Towards Bethlehem. 

(see moreLove Letter to NYC: LIFE Photos)

vanityfair:

In memoriam.
[Illustration by Jonathan Mak. Thanks @danielholter for letting us know about the talented author of this design—we’d seen it everywhere sans attribution, and we’re happy to call him out now.]
View high resolution

vanityfair:

In memoriam.

[Illustration by Jonathan Mak. Thanks @danielholter for letting us know about the talented author of this design—we’d seen it everywhere sans attribution, and we’re happy to call him out now.]

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