Miss Maroon
jessicajane9 posted a photo:
Maroon coatigan, white top & deep blue skinny jeans with grey bag and ankle boots
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Miss Maroon
jessicajane9 posted a photo:
Maroon coatigan, white top & deep blue skinny jeans with grey bag and ankle boots
Take a moment
Julie Bracken posted a photo:
Take a moment to live
Take a moment to cry
Take a moment to love
And don’t ask why
~Winter Kills video link
Photo, makeup and styling by the talented Kelayla of www.transvista.co.uk/
DSC09702
11 Nov 16
Limit(less) Project: Sarah
mowunna posted a photo:
Sarah: Lesbian Ugandan (Sweden)
Q. How would you describe your style?
“My clothing style? Oh god, it’s very mixed. I dress depending on the weather and mood. I’m not so strict with dress code in that way, if i want to wear a gown on a tuesday because i feel like it I will, so I wear depending on the weather and my mood. I wear a lot of African prints and my own design as well casual street wear (www.kalunjidesign.com).”
– Sarah (Lesbian Ugandan, She/Her, IG: @kalunji040 FB: www.facebook.com/nakiito)
Donate to support the project: HERE
About Limit(less)
Limit(less) is a photography project by Mikael Owunna (@owning-my-truth) documenting the fashion and style of LGBTQ African Immigrants (1st and 2nd generation) in diaspora. As LGBTQ Africans, we are constantly told that being LGBTQ is somehow “un-African,” and this rhetoric is a regular part of homophobic and transphobic discourse in African communities. This line of thinking, however, is patently false and exists an artifact of colonization of the African continent. Identities which would now be categorized as “LGBTQ” have always existed, and being LGBTQ does not make us “less” African.
Limit(less) explores how LGBTQ African immigrants navigate their identities and find ways to overcome the supposed “tension” between their LGBTQ and African identities through their fashion and style. The project seeks to visually deconstruct the colonial binary that has been set up between LGBTQ and African identities, which erases the lives and experiences of LGBTQ Africans. #LimitlessAfricans
Donate to support the project: HERE
Website:
limitlessafricans.com/
Facebook Page:
facebook.com/limitlessafricans
Tumblr:
limitlessafricans.tumblr.com
On November 2, 2016, Trigon, Penn State Univerosty-Behrend's LGBTQ student group, again held their annual Drag Show in the Reed Union Building. Thev event was very well attended and there was also an amateur drag competition.
Michael Mahler posted a photo:
On November 2, 2016, Trigon, Penn State Univerosty-Behrend’s LGBTQ student group, again held their annual Drag Show in the Reed Union Building. Thev event was very well attended and there was also an amateur drag competition.
Miami Beach, Mardi Gras Caerdydd – Cardiff, 2012
Rhisiart Hincks posted a photo:
Wedi ei ailolygu / Adwelet a-nevez / Re-edited: 1/2017
Todd Logan – Project Transitions
KUTAustin posted a photo:
AUSTIN, TEXAS – January 10, 2017: Todd Logan is the director of client services for Project Transitions, a nonprofit serving people with AIDS by providing hospice, housing, and support. Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon/KUT News.
Love me now
Julie Bracken posted a photo:
I don’t know who’s gonna kiss you when I’m gone
So I’m gonna love you now, like it’s all I have
I know it’ll kill me when it’s over
I don’t wanna think about it, I want you to love me now.
~John Legend video link
Photo, makeup and styling by the talented Kelayla of www.transvista.co.uk/
DSC09712
11 Nov 16
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