The Death of the Nymph Hesperia by Jules-Élie Delaunay (1859)
Detail of Two Scenes from 'Der Busant' (The Buzzard), tapestry from Alsace (1480-90)
I remember first seeing this photo and it was my godly dream coordinate. I wanted to be both of these people at the same time as well as hang out with them. The combination of both the red and bordot velveteen is so gorgeous and extravagant. I love this to pieces even now. It is just perfect and like a Mihara Mitsukazu drawing.
I managed to track down the Jane Marple velveteen pants. Now to find a red cape… someday…!!!
Saint Michael Triumphant over the Devil by Bartolome Bermejo, 1468.
Mechanical dog, Ancient Egypt, ca. 1390–1352 B.C. (New Kingdom), part of Metropolitan Museum’s collection
This leaping hunting dog can be made to open and close its mouth using the lever beneath the chest. Originally secured by means of a thong tied through the hole in the back of its neck and two in the throat, the lever was later attached with a metal dowel in the right shoulder. When the mouth is opened, two teeth and a red tongue are visible.
the office of the dead
illuminated page from a book of hours, flanders, late 15th c.
source: Munich, BSB, Clm 28345, fol. 294r
French vintage postcard
Gold decorated and etched burgonet crafted in Augsburg, Germany, circa 1575-1600
from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Fritz-Philipp Schmidt (1869-1945), 'Der Richter und der Teufel' (The Judge and the Devil), ''Dekorative Kunst'', Vol. 7, 1901
Living Dead - Inside the Palermo Crypt (M. Lanza, Westzone, 2000)
William Russell Flint - Homer's Odyssey No. 13 Book XVIII (1914)
The Voices (1867) by Gustave Moreau