stencils:

Big mural by Faith47 - Cape Town (street art) (by jX Stencils)
myculture:

RAY
Photographer Janette Beckman for Ben Sherman T-Shirt Collection
Lena Dystant, selectism.com
Black |
npr:

vintageblackglamour:

Blanche Dunn, the chic Harlem Renaissance-era actress, photographed in Morningside Park in Harlem by her friend, Carl Van Vechten, in 1940. Ms. Dunn was essentially an “It” girl of the era: a mainstay at Van Vechten’s legendary parties and, as noted by the legendary Harlem Renaissance writer, painter Richard Bruce Nugent, “at all the Broadway first nights. A party was not a party, a place not a place, without Blanche”. Photo: Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.

I love the hat! — tanya b.
npr:

vintageblackglamour:

Actress Theresa Harris as she appeared in the 1948 film, “The Velvet Touch,” which starred Rosalind Russell. Ms. Harris was the inspiration behind Lynn Nottage’s play, “By the Way, Meet Vera Stark” which starred Sanaa Lathan. From Donald Bogle’s Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood: “Harris - who was both outspoken and highly intelligent - didn’t mince words about the plight of colored actresses. She told Fay M. Jackson, of the California Eagle in August 1937: “I never felt the chance to rise above the role of maid in Hollywood movies. My color was against me. The fact that I was not ‘hot’ stamped me as either an uppity ‘Negress’ or relegated me to the eternal role of stooge or servant. I can sing but so can hundreds of other girls. My ambitions are to be an actress. Hollywood had no parts for me.” Photo via A Certain Cinema.

Interesting. — tanya b.
THE PALMS
A & P Bench No. 91senseslost.com
A & P Bench have put togeth­er new bench­ing pho­tos for this week’s fea­ture.Check out more fea­tures from A & P Bench or check them out on Flickr.
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