Ark : Aliens in Vintage Postcards : Franco Brambilla

Someone’s feeling it …

#nobutseriouslythough

#daaamn

[ Source ]

Jerome Lachavellier : Quite possibly my favorite male model, all time.

‟ I mean, I can’t even … ”

Jacket : Jean Paul Gaultier
Photo : Paolo Roversi 

[ Cover : The Man of Fashion : Peacock Males and Perfect Gentlemen ]

Love that the box cover takes it to the dark side of pyschedelica … 
No rainbow-hued fractals or spiraling tie-dye patterns here, kiddos —
Oh no : rather than The Greatful Dead, they’re straight-up death-trippin’ 

[ via Fun From Yesterday : Mightygodking.com ]

Mod as Fuck :
The Retro-Modern Music Den 

Avon : Satanic Gothic series, early ’70s

[ as in : ‟Ding-Dong, Avon calling!” ]

Yes. That Avon.
Kind of. Can’t. Handle it … 

Future is Now! 

The Bubble Stereo
via ]


Bella La Ghostly,
Vampiress Switchboard Operator in The Groovie Goolies


Ha!

[ re-blog, beautynursedondarkness ] :

“ f l a m e r . b o y ,

w i Ⴕ h

h a i r . a f l a m e ”



Oh.

And here it is : Monday …


Ka-Bala :
“ The Mysterious Game That Tells The Future ”


The game was molded out of green plastic that glowed in the dark. It sat upon a hemispherical rocker, and was operated by the players touching the “solary projectors”, which were handles on either side of the game. Unlike most talking boards which are activated by a planchette, the Ka-Bala used a large black marble as an indicator; the marble ran around a circular track on the surface of the game. In addition to indicating the letters and numbers printed around the track, the marble could also be used to select one of twenty-two major arcana cards of occult tarot supplied with the game. Each tarot card had the fortune it predicted printed on the back. The game also had the twelve zodiac signs marked along the track; these could be used to generate a simple horoscope. In the centre of the rocking board, the “Eye of Zohar” was mounted; this plastic eyeball would spin as the board was agitated by the players.

The name “Ka-Bala” and the reference to Zohar indicate that the game was supposedly related to the kabbalistic school of Jewish mysticism. As they operated the game, the players were instructed to chant Pax, sax, sarax; hola, noa, nostra!


[ via Wikipedia ]


1964, and Shirley Maclaine was So. Happening …

[ What A Way To Go! ]


(Source: gifmovie)