Entry tags:
(no subject)
weekly, monthly? roundup of links
- "Every chord of joy has a tear behind it." quote from this interview about The Brave Little Toaster. coincidentally, evageeks (over)analyzes "Worthless", a song from the same movie that should tell you a) everything about it, and b) everything about krad considering that was and is *my* movie.
- Kathy Zielinski has a pretty recent blog! :D there's never-before-seen hexxus concept art!!!
- I've been doing a leisurely deep dive on Leather history and there's an incredibly shocking amount of those books hosted on archive.org - I'm not sure if some kind soul just happened to upload a bunch in hopes they wouldn't be forgotten, or what - but it's a multifold blessing as these are the kind hard to sneak in a home that's not always friendly to such liberalness or through the work mail.
My favorite two being Urban Aboriginals and Leatherfolk - they're both well rounded actual histories of Leather (and really, queer history in the 60's-80's) in conjunction with being an anthology of sorts with private thoughts about what makes it Tick(tm) from icons. As much as the current internet makes me feel alienated, this makes me feel at home.
- shared on twitter: Mark Chester (himself a historic Leather photographer) has a corner of his site dedicated to Chuck Arnett, an unsung trailblazer of a kink artist back in the 70's. Incredible history, here. (I tried mirroring the site on archive.org but it kept throwing me errors, hmm.)
- "Every chord of joy has a tear behind it." quote from this interview about The Brave Little Toaster. coincidentally, evageeks (over)analyzes "Worthless", a song from the same movie that should tell you a) everything about it, and b) everything about krad considering that was and is *my* movie.
- Kathy Zielinski has a pretty recent blog! :D there's never-before-seen hexxus concept art!!!
- I've been doing a leisurely deep dive on Leather history and there's an incredibly shocking amount of those books hosted on archive.org - I'm not sure if some kind soul just happened to upload a bunch in hopes they wouldn't be forgotten, or what - but it's a multifold blessing as these are the kind hard to sneak in a home that's not always friendly to such liberalness or through the work mail.
My favorite two being Urban Aboriginals and Leatherfolk - they're both well rounded actual histories of Leather (and really, queer history in the 60's-80's) in conjunction with being an anthology of sorts with private thoughts about what makes it Tick(tm) from icons. As much as the current internet makes me feel alienated, this makes me feel at home.
- shared on twitter: Mark Chester (himself a historic Leather photographer) has a corner of his site dedicated to Chuck Arnett, an unsung trailblazer of a kink artist back in the 70's. Incredible history, here. (I tried mirroring the site on archive.org but it kept throwing me errors, hmm.)