And now, since I haven’t posted one of my graphic disasters in a long time, here’s one I just came up with now.

I fucking love these two to death, and considering the little amount of time I took to make this, I love this picture to death too.


So I was rewatching the 2011 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show after emptying their store of everything from their semi-annual clearance sale (lol) and felt like putting this together.

Warning: It’s a big picture.


The only reason I haven’t deleted this is because there is a shortage of this movie on Tumblr.


The Canadian National Vimy Memorial

Canada’s most impressive tribute overseas to those Canadians who fought and gave their lives in the First World War is the majestic and inspiring Canadian National Vimy Memorial which overlooks the Douai Plain from the highest point of Vimy Ridge, about ten kilometres north of Arras. The Memorial does more than mark the site of the engagement that Canadians were to remember with more pride than any other operation of the First World War. It stands as a tribute to all who served their country in battle in that four-year struggle and particularly to those who gave their lives. At the base of the Memorial, these words appear in French and in English:

To the valour of their
Countrymen in the Great War
And in memory of their sixty
Thousand dead this monument
Is raised by the people of Canada

Carved on the walls of the monument are the names of 11,285 Canadian soldiers who were killed in France and whose final resting place was then unknown. Standing on the monument’s wide stone terrace overlooking the broad fields and rolling hills of Northern France, one can see other places where Canadians fought and died. More than 7,000 are buried in 30 war cemeteries within a 20-kilometre radius of the Vimy Memorial. Altogether, more than 66,000 Canadian service personnel died in the First World War.