A vintage, handmade genie costume, probably used for Mardi Gras celebrations. 💚
I Dream of Jeannie (a play on "Genie") was a popular sitcom from 1965-1970 featuring a 2,000-year-old genie and an astronaut (I mean c'mon, it's the middle of the space race, of course he's an astronaut).
A fun video conversing with you on the history of women's body hair, from seashell razors to Sophia Loren's famous armpits and everything in between.
Inspired by growing out my underarm hair and bush (a bit, anyway) I ended the lesson with a striptease showing off all my hair.
The rest of the video of me leaning into this hair fetish and ending with riding a dildo on my hands and knees while showing off all my new hair is in your inboxes 💋
The association of white with purity and virginity arguably has some ties to antiquity: the Greeks followed a wedding practice of women donning white for bridal ceremonies, and they weren’t the only culture.
But looking more globally, brides and wedding parties wore all kinds of colors that still represented purity.
The iconic white, intricate gowns of weddings today are more closely linked to Queen Victoria who, at the time, was an international style icon (or as much as one could be in the 1800s). At the time, white garments were a social status: they were made of superior materials and a result expensive.
Even more than that, they could afford to wear something that couldn’t be easily cleaned, especially in hot summer months.
The sundress: popularized in 1940 with form fitting designs that flared out and flowed with bold prints on them. They grew in popularity in the 1950s and by the 1960s were considered a staple for your closet.
The point of a sundress was exactly as it sounds - to create a lightweight, sexy dress that could be worn comfortably in warm temperatures. There's a lot of styles but they pretty typically have a bodice, thin straps, are lightweight and worn without any other layers or coverings.
The one I'm wearing is just a loose lingerie-style take on it with matching panties. 🌸
After much demand, I'm now offering Private Livestreams!
Attached is the flyer with the calendar of my availability. ☀️ Daytime hours on Tuesday & Wednesday 🌙 Evening hours on the weekends
Flat rate of $100/30 minutes or $175 for an hour tipped at time of booking. You'll get: ✨ Hanging out & chatting ✨ A striptease to get out of my lingerie and get naked ✨ Playing with toys until we cum and our time is up. *Anal toys will have an added premium charge and requires notice at booking*
Bookings close 3 days ahead of time. Once you're booked, I create a private livestream link for you to join here on the platform.
What everyone thinks a running shop is like after hours.
I mean, I guess it is kind of like this just with more sweeping and mopping and tidying and hoping the ghosts that the neighboring shop swears exist don’t make themselves known 😅
In just a few hours from this post going live, the planets will be aligning into what headlines are calling "the planetary parade."
A rare event, the other 7 (sorry, Pluto) planets in our solar system will be appear to be lined up. Getty Images has a nice graphic that I can't share here, but it's a cool visual. From left to right, Jupiter, Mercury, Uranus, Mars, Neptune & Saturn will appear from left to right if you look towards the Eastern sky just before sunrise in USA time.
In reality, the planets aren't actually aligned in orbit - they just appear that way from our perspective. It's not uncommon for 2-4 of the planets to be briefly aligned as they orbit the sun, but for all 8 planets to be aligned is super rare and, from Earth's perspective, you wouldn't be able to see it because we'd also be in the single-file line of planets.
So, being able to observe the planets lined up in front of us is kind of cooler than an actual planetary alignment, even if it's less rare. 🪐
🔭🌌 ✨ In honor of this neat space event, I'm doing a flash sale on my space videos to make room for new ones! Check your inboxes for the bundle of Space Videos for less than the price of one! 🔭🌌 ✨
My next lesson in my series on historical sex toys is going to be on the French way (or all things oral 👅)
I’ve been testing out different toys and different camera angles and different sex toys ahead of the lesson. Check your inboxes for a mutual masturbation video.
Summer vacation: a concept that developed around the mid 19th century. At the time, schools were mostly independently operated, with a summer and winter session. As education became more standardized into the 20th century, it was found that during the summer it was difficult to keep students cool in school buildings, and families from hotter climates migrated to areas with cooler temperatures. As a result, a standard summer vacation was created.
🌟New Video Alert! 🌟 Have y'all seen this new trend? Riding a Peloton in all senses of the word. 🚴🏻♀️
Yours truly has one.
The only thing more surprising than me having a Peloton (I mean, c'mon if I spent half as much time riding it as I do on pool hangs and imbibing and thinking clean eating cancels it out I'd probably weigh 20 pounds less) is that I had all the notes on how to get the dildo to stay stuck to the seat (duct tape? rope?)
Nope - literally just stuck it onto the seat and voila, it suctioned right on. I should have turned the camera on earlier so you could've seen my reaction!
Anyway, I hopped (hehehe) on the trend and thought you'd enjoy the view 😈 Check your DMs!
PS: I got several DMs for my Memorial Day post wondering where my bush went. Rest assured, they were old photos. After the overwhelming requests during my live to grow the hair, I've gone full Sophia Loren for the time being and a result I've never been so aware that I have armpits before. 💋
Leather has always been popular but, with the advent of punk and metal in the 1980s began to define an iconic aesthetic for punks and motorcycle riders alike: black leather jackets and vests.
One of the main characters from Star Trek, a hit sci-fi TV series from the 1960s featured Spock, a Vulcan, and his greeting that uses a hand signal accompanied by the famous phrase.
Star Trek is one of the longest running franchises and was inspired by (among many things) the launch of the Russian satellite Sputnik in 1957.
Happy Memorial Day 🇺🇸 Thank you to those who served, and sacrificed.
Memorial Day in the United States originated after the Civil War, first celebrated in 1868 as “Decoration Day” when graves of soldiers fallen (both Union and Confederate) would be decorated with flowers.
The timing of the holiday is to coincide with the most likely time for flowers to bloom. Poppies are typically associated with memorials after a famous poem, In Flanders’ Fields, was published during WW1 after noting the multitude of poppies growing over soldier burial grounds. The American Legion soon adopted he poppy as a symbol of mourning and memorializing those that sacrificed their lives in war.
A Gunne Sax top from the 1970s and lingerie from my personal collection.
Gunne Sax (named for the gunny sack, or burlap sack style trim at the bottom of the dresses) was founded in the 1960s with the intent to recreate pioneer-style clothing (think gingham, lace and calico) which became hugely popular. Original Gunne Sax pieces are hard to come by nowadays. The company stop producing them ages ago so if you find one it’s finding treasure!
A 1970s bodysuit and I can’t decide if I wanna add sparkly bellbottoms and hit up Studio 54, or just don some roller skates and groove our to disco on the roller rink 🛼
I’m the 1970s, disco became the perfect groove to roller skate to. Adding a disco ball, flashing lights, and groovy beats made the roller rink a popular place for kids and adults alike. Movies like Saturday Night Fever helped solidify the roller rink as the place to be.
The history of sheer lingerie is, unsurprisingly, long and originated around the mid—1700s in France by the royal court. It’s tied in with the use of body stockings (which I’ve covered in a previous post) but, being made of superior fabrics it wasn’t exactly accessible to your average woman.
It wasn’t until the 20th century when lingerie began to be mass produced that its popularity soared, and further became associated with the burlesque movement and you see them in bold colors like this one. 💜
A 1970s Deadstock Votes For Women top! One of the coolest shirts I’ve gotten my hands on.
I just did a post on the low number of women in the US government in the 1970s and the resulting push for better representation. I won’t repeat myself here but this shirt falls into the same political timeframe in the campaign for women to have a say 💋
Apollo 11: the mission to land mankind on the moon
Allegedly, “The mission was so dangerous, the astronauts couldn't get life insurance. So they each autographed hundreds of philatelic "covers," envelopes their friends had postmarked on July 20, 1969, which they knew their families could sell to collectors to fund their kids' college education if they did not return.”
While the 1950s/60s is the typical era you’d associate with a bandeau top (picture that iconic Marilyn Monroe bikini photo), they’ve actually been around literally forever.
It comes from the French word for “strip” (of cloth) but is depicted in art from Ancient Greece and looks pretty much like bandeaus of today.
A fun fact: pink is one of the oldest colors found in the geological record dating back rocks found in 1.1 billion-year-old rocks found underneath the sands of the Sahara. Pink has been used as pigments for art, fabrics, pottery, etc throughout time without much regard to gender until the 20th century.
Hot pink as a pigment is actually a relatively new phenomenon, though. The Italian fashion designer, Schiaparelli, introduced it in his 1937 line of designs touting a bold, vivid pink as a new mainstream color.