Due to Betty's recent illness, most of Betty's sites are limited to members only, and no new registrations for memberships will be accepted at this time.

Trans News ~ Headline News ~ Science News ~ Tech News ~ Paranormal & Aliens
Odd News ~ Betty's YouTube ~ My other channel


The more you give, the
more I can give back!

There has been,

Hits to Betty's
Pubs since
Sept. 30th, 2004

Author Topic: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.  (Read 34920 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #10 on: August 30, 2014, 04:19:27 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Well my first week back at work wasn’t too painful. I had an annoying Internet outage to start my first day back; I was one of the millions of people affected by Time-Warner’s massive screw up. It’s frustrating, we had DSL at the office and had problems so we switched to Time Warner as cable ostensibly was never down but that proved to be a canard. And FIOS hasn’t made it to our office building yet so there’s really no place to go. In this day and age when the Internet goes out our business effectively stops. All my work is done on the Internet not to mention that without email there’s very little communication. Not like when I started working for my manufacturing Company almost 40 years ago and my tools were my inventory cards, my pencil, my adding machine and my telephone. At least it was touch tone not a rotary. I remember the first time I called a business and was sent into voice mail and told at the end to press buttons for further options. I did so and one of the options was to listen to the message I had just recorded to decide if I wanted to send it. I did so and was very surprised to hear my voice. It sounded nothing like the last time I had heard my voice which was a surreptitious reel to reel tape recording of my family I did when I was 12 years old. That’s a good thing I guess.

I had a pleasant morning today. I walked up to the Frick museum and saw the current two painting exhibit, “Men in Armor.” It’s the 400th anniversary of the death of El Greco and this is one of many exhibits that will open in the Northeast this fall to celebrate El Greco. Although why we celebrate the anniversary of his death is open to question. You would think it would be his birth as cause for celebration. This is a link to the NY Times article that discusses the exhibit. It also has illustrations of the two paintings, one by El Greco, the other by Scipione Pulzone, a Roman peer of his. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/22/arts/design/men-in-armor-el-greco-and-pulzone-at-the-frick-collection.html?_r=0  They are both strikingly beautiful paintings of men in armor, hence the title of the exhibit. This El Greco is one of only two full length portraits that he painted. The Pulzone is shown seated. I confess that even though I read the article in the Times about the exhibit I had forgotten that the painting that was on loan wasn’t by El Greco and was surprised when I approached it. Wonderful details in both portraits. El Greco is not one of my favorites, I find his religious paintings a little austere but the “Vincenzo Anastagi” is full of life and vibrant.

The Met is planning a show as well in the next few weeks and I will definitely visit. I was only at the Frick about 15 minutes; after I saw the two paintings, I said hello to the Vermeer painting of the woman with a maid which I believe to be the most beautiful painting in the world and the Ingres painting of the “Comtesse d'Haussonville”, another favorite, before breezing through the different rooms. Then I walked up to the Metropolitan museum because I wanted to see a painting by Jan Steen from a private collection which isn’t always on display, “Bathsheba Receiving David s Letter.” My brother pointed it out to me in an email and I tried to find it once before but he had made a mistake in telling me the location so I couldn’t find it the last time. I was successful this time and glad as it’s a stunner as you will see if you click on this link. http://www.wikiart.org/ru/Tag/bathsheba#supersized-search-251698  Afterwards I visited the rest of the Dutch whom I love, Vermeer, Rembrandt, Hals, Ter Borch and others and then made my way home to have my coffee. Very enjoyable.

And so, on to the Flickrs.

Andy G.

Nice dress, bro.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/izik/14584523539

Liam asked to dress like Elsa      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/thekarpiuks/14689966519

Cute Brolita!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/bluezhift/5748966800

Boys in dresses- Gruver High School, Iowa, 1954

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ronigreen/10992053625

Guys in dresses

https://www.flickr.com/photos/snarkel/3822727665

Pink Princess

https://www.flickr.com/photos/petticoat_brenda/10045776226

Lolita Boy

https://www.flickr.com/photos/sleepykisser/126460692

495378816HGWYXr_ph

https://www.flickr.com/photos/genexion3/421149089

Fairy Boy

https://www.flickr.com/photos/33767836@N07/4866855996

Brendan and Michelle

https://www.flickr.com/photos/63856428@N00/487716538

Adorable

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ginaazzurro/14787710656

Bonded Crepe 2

https://www.flickr.com/photos/amberjolake/14827409984


Offline alison

  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 50
  • Karma: +8947/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #11 on: August 31, 2014, 08:26:57 PM »
Maybe I can explain why the celebration is the anniversary of his death, not his birth.

In some cultures you commemorate a person's death as an honor to their life.  When we are born, we are a blank slate.  But when we die, we have all the accomplishments in our lives that we want others to remember.

This has roots in the Judeo-Christian tradition too.  In Ecclesiastes Chapter 7 Verse 1 says "A good name is better than a good ointment, And the day of one's death is better than the day of one's birth." 


Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #12 on: August 31, 2014, 08:55:44 PM »
Thanks Alison.

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #13 on: September 06, 2014, 04:50:20 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

It’s been fairly warm here of late, something I find amusing as it’s now the end of the season and we did not have a particularly hot summer. But it goes along with my theory that we are entering a 2 season year, Winter and not winter. It’s not winter I vote for if there is an election.

I had a little adventure on my walk up to the Metropolitan museum this morning. It was warm and sticky  and I was sweating as I walked uptown. I got to Fifth Avenue at 57th Street and saw there were stanchions up and lots of cops. I wondered what was going on but didn’t pay close attention. I thought I might ask a cop as I walked up but I never found one who wasn’t preoccupied. Then I got to 62nd Street and they wouldn’t let me proceed. I told them I was going to the Met and they told me I had to walk back to 61st and cross the avenue. I did and when I got to 62nd St on the East side of Fifth the cop wouldn’t let me go any further. It was a “frozen zone.” I said I wanted to go to the Met and he paused a moment and then said it was okay to cross the street and  continue uptown but when I explained that they had sent me to him he told me I had to go around. I verified that he meant walking to Madison Avenue. So I did but I wasn’t happy, Madison Avenue is uphill and I was already hot and sticky. I kept looking left as I walked uptown and once we got into the 70’s I noticed they weren’t blocking off the side streets anymore and my access to the Met was not impeded when I walked down 79th street. I asked the cop if it was a parade and he said yes, and I asked for what and he said Labor. I walked away thinking to myself, the Labor Day parade today? And you’re not allowing people to watch it from the side? Then I realized there were no stands and the only person I had seen on the way up was an older man sitting on a chair and he was probably just tired. When I thought about it I realized that when he said Labor he meant the unions or a group like that and this wasn’t going to be a parade so much as a demonstration. I Googled it and could find absolutely nothing about it. At any rate I’m glad it didn’t keep me out of the Met nor prevent me from catching the crosstown bus to get to the West side and go home

What brought me to the Met this morning was a one room exhibition of some of the Met’s miniature paintings. It’s not really a special exhibit and the Met’s not playing it up as such, they have no description of it on the website and only mention it as “In Miniature” on the little flyer that lists all current events. It’s all items from the permanent collection but brought together in one area and it’s only a small portion of what they have in the collection. But it’s a wonderful collection with work from Hans Holbein among others. They were very beautiful, what I could see of them that is. I saw them all before I realized there were magnifiers so I picked one up and went around again. They help but they’re not very magnified and unfortunately they were useless for a sampling of the  little objects in a glass case like this snuff box which has really ornate art on them. http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/193855?=&imgNo=0&tabName=related-objects When you see the picture you have to realize that the snuff box is 2 ¾” by 2” with pictures on all sides. Because of the glass case the magnifier only obscured them. A very nice little exhibit though. And once again my keen sense of direction sent me into the gallery from the wrong end and I wound up walking completely around to come to the exhibit only to find that it was one gallery away from the other entrance. This is a link to the museum website with several of the items that are in the exhibit. Look for the items in gallery 624, there are 7. Just use CTRL F to find each of them.  http://www.metmuseum.org/search-results?y=0&x=0&ft=miniatures&rpp=100&pg=1

Well, let’s move on to the pix. The first clip is actually girls but I love the dresses and the long hair. When I was in my late teens I grew my hair out past my shoulders. I'd never liked getting it cut and I kept it long until I finally joined the business world. Even after that I worked at a very casual Company and was able to grow it out long again. After getting the job I didn't get it cut for a year. From that point on less time started to elapse between haircuts to finally end up at around 2 months or so. When I retire I wouldn't mind growing it long again but my long hair days are clearly behind me, I can go three or four months now between haircuts and it only gets a little shaggy on the sides much to my chagrin. Hoping that it doesn't continue to recede on top but I wouldn't bet against that happening. I've had a beard since I was able to grow one, it was never a very good beard but I've always had it. I shaved it off when I cut my hair to get that first job. I had to laugh when I arrived for the interview. I opened up the front door of the office and saw a man behind a desk smoking a cigarette, he had a beard. And so did every male employee except for the man who became my immediate boss, including the owner of the Company who I became such good friends with that we're still in touch almost 20 years after the Company was sold. When I told him I shaved my beard for the interview he laughed and asked me why I had done it.

On to the Flickrs.

1962 Children's Fashion Ad, Girls' Party Dresses, with Magician & Black Cat, "Magic in the Air" (2 pages)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/29069717%40N02/15138653862

Transexual Crossdressing       

https://www.flickr.com/photos/sandstormmelody/8153723082 

Felicia

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mknt367/sets/72157646911186106

kazumi.takahasi

https://www.flickr.com/photos/27401732%40N05/14640709617/

Transvestite

 https://www.flickr.com/photos/111227158%40N03/14608200967

BEFORE THE PARADE

https://www.flickr.com/photos/41557568%40N04/14655567019

Tyra

https://www.flickr.com/photos/94761878%40N04/14662663309

Boy_Lolita_by_Carnet_atelier

https://www.flickr.com/photos/111842254%40N05/14650531737/

Sissy Chastity

https://www.flickr.com/photos/sissy_chastity/14828555876

 In my gymslip and knee high socks

https://www.flickr.com/photos/emilykneesocks/12206347223/

Romantic White Lace #crossdresser #crossdress #trap #男の娘

https://www.flickr.com/photos/125297767%40N03/14904164035/

CIMG8242

https://www.flickr.com/photos/dressrei/14709710430

Back in PINK!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/knessia/14704329669

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #14 on: September 13, 2014, 07:05:45 AM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Well, it may still be Summer on the calendar but it’s a very cool morning. Our so called heat wave is a thing of the past and I for one am pining for it. It’s also going to be a rainy day which doesn’t please me as I am heading down to the Jersey shore to visit with friends. I didn’t plan on swimming, I just don’t like driving in the rain.

Anyway, it’s early and I don’t have much to say so I won’t say much aside from wishing everyone a good weekend.

Our first link isn’t from Flickr but I thought it was cute and if you scroll down you’ll see other interesting things, old and new, real and photoshopped.

Andy G.

http://www.pinterest.com/pin/108508672245528110/   

P-PercyAtTheGates

https://www.flickr.com/photos/8072809%40N05/496619524   

ConnorreadyforProm509jpg

https://www.flickr.com/photos/mjjk28/8567138466 

Scavenger hunt required a girl dressed as a boy, and vice versa      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/24018528%40N04/14998378997 

goth-loli crossplay      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/faetea/526996462 

The dress felt gorgeous

https://www.flickr.com/photos/tranniefun/14844684424

Nancy Blow Looking for mr right.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/maideasy/2150393286

School Girl Sissy

https://www.flickr.com/photos/125780076%40N05/14890330393

140814s001

https://www.flickr.com/photos/sissy_chastity/14962307025

B o y B r i d e (10,000+ views, 50+ favs)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/beccakiss/6002174913

Teddy was a free thinker

https://www.flickr.com/photos/60741642%40N06/14971969821

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #15 on: September 20, 2014, 03:32:29 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

Well it stayed fairly cool this week as we approach the beginning of Fall. Today started out cool but made it into the 70’s, with tomorrow expected to be warmer but the trend is definitely heading in the opposite direction. As we age time starts to lose its grip, or rather I should say we start to lose our grip on time. I was filling out my monthly comic book order, something that has dwindled over the years to about 7 or 8 issues, when I realized I had ordered issue one of a new title and then forgot to order issue two. So I ordered issue three and emailed my representative to see if it was still possible to order the second issue. Then as a fall back I went online to see when issue two was scheduled to ship so I could pick it up at a comics shop if I couldn’t get it through my service. The ship date was November 5th which I then entered into my calendar as a reminder. And I thought to myself, November 5th? That’s months away. Then I rethought it and realized, no, it was only 6 weeks away. A chilling thought if you don’t mind the pun. I search the auction site for bound volumes of newspapers and magazines and occasionally I will buy individual copies of the old New York dailies if they are old enough, take place during baseball season and inexpensive. As I search I see lots of newspapers for sale with headlines of significant events from the last 30 years or so and I am constantly amazed when I see a celebrity passing or a tragedy or something similar and realize how much time has passed since it happened. Things that didn’t really make an impression on me when they occurred other than noting them still make me shake my head and say, it was how long ago? There’s a theory about time and aging which my employer, who is now my friend, told me many years ago when I was much younger. Our perception of time does pass more quickly as we age because of our experience. When we turn five years old, a year takes forever because a year is 20% of our existence. When we turn 50 years old, not so much, as one year is only 2% of our existence. It seems so often that the days are long but the years pass very quickly.

Anyway, I had a splendid time visiting with my friends last week. They have two lovely children who add to my sense of time passing. In speaking about their son I generally start off by saying, the little boy, but as he will celebrating his 16th birthday in November I always stop myself as that doesn’t really apply anymore. I’ve known his cousin since he was born and I still think of him as the little boy and he will be 34 this year. I had an interesting time with the GPS again. I was charging it the night before and usually it beeps and when I check it’s searching for satellites and will ask me if it should continue or turn on for indoor use. This time it never asked the question. And at one point, I heard it beep and when I checked it said detour. Detour? I hadn’t noticed a roadblock in going from the kitchen to the living room. I’d never seen that on the GPS before. Having no sense of direction, if there is a blockage I can’t do what most drivers do which is get off and navigate a new route. I would only get hopelessly lost. I have a feeling that with the GPS if I tried to navigate a new route it would spend it’s time determined to send me back to the blockage rather than charting me a new way of proceeding. I mentioned the last time I traveled down that the GPS had told me to turn right when it should have said left which was a real surprise. It did it again this time, how reassuring that someone like me who is a complete creature of habit, has a GPS that feels the same way. This time though, I realized that I had to listen to it because it’s a highway and there is no left turn. What I found out when I arrived and spoke to my friend was that if I had gone straight I would have come to a jug handle where I could have turned around and then gone the right way. I find it interesting that there are no signs before the turn that would tell me that.

When it was time to go home I got into the car and turned on the GPS and waited. And waited. And waited some more as it searched for satellites. To the point where I wondered if I was going to spend the night in their driveway. Actually it was long enough that I was contemplating going back inside and saying, so, after right, left, right, then what do I do? Finally it found a satellite and off we went. It was a miserable night, the whole day had been rainy, intermittent on the way down, stopping not far into the trip but it poured the whole way home. And the combination of the rain, the dark, opposing headlights and my vision do not make for a pleasure cruise for me. But it’s worth the aggravation as they’re a lovely family and always make me feel very much at home.

No art this week, all I did was head into the City and visit Valentino and get my hair cut. Almost four months since my last haircut but it certainly wasn’t especially long. It seems to grow out on the sides now as opposed to growing down. Doesn’t seem to do much growing on the top at all. But he did a beautiful job and made me look very respectable.

I haven’t decided yet but I may actually break my routine and go into New York City tomorrow as there is an auction of prints at Swann’s. I wouldn’t bid but from the illustrations I’ve seen it looks to be a very nice exhibit. Usually my Sundays are spent reading the newspapers and just hanging out but I do want to see this exhibition and didn’t want to hang around in the City today until it opened at Noon. If I go I’ll bring the papers with me and read them on the way out and back. This all depends on if my plumber calls as I was rather hoping to get my boiler cleaned and fired up for the season this weekend.

Well, that was a lot of ink about not much. Hope no one fell asleep reading it.

Andy G.

Hairdressers

https://www.flickr.com/photos/64419249%40N06/14768005840

Best days are when child dresses himself.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/monkeyjedi/14944154466/ 

Halloween West Hollywood 2012 Snow White Drag Princess

https://www.flickr.com/photos/8167243%40N06/8146047382

Delight    

https://www.flickr.com/photos/60741642%40N06/15260831555

Red party outfit

https://www.flickr.com/photos/georgieukcd/14796353738

copper dress

https://www.flickr.com/photos/125724517%40N06/14936338212

CHERYL SISSY 81

https://www.flickr.com/photos/126474938%40N07/15023037766/ 

Another black outfit.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/sabine57/14869602900

Party5

https://www.flickr.com/photos/93817564%40N06/14859028189

星織ユメミライ 鳴沢律佳 1

https://www.flickr.com/photos/fukapon/14835450207

transvestite

https://www.flickr.com/photos/111227158%40N03/14991878822

Red Sissy Maid

https://www.flickr.com/photos/msemilytv/10818097293

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #16 on: September 27, 2014, 04:05:06 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

I’m guessing we are experiencing the last gasp of Summer here in the Northeast with temperatures just over 80 degrees. I’m enjoying every minute of it.

Last week I wanted to visit Swann’s auction house to see a preview of an auction of American  prints. I didn’t go on Saturday as the auction house opens at 12PM and I like to be home drinking my coffee around that time. I lead a very structured life and people who know me know that I seldom break my routine. To the point that one Saturday morning I went to the cleaners to pick up my pants arriving five minutes later than usual as I wanted to give my fish man a chance to get more goods in the case and when I arrived the cleaner looked at me and said, you’re late. Well. But occasionally something will prod me to break my routine and this auction was something I really wanted to see. I decided to go on Sunday figuring that since all I do on Sunday’s, for the most part, is read the Sunday newspapers. I could get most of that done prior to leaving and then read the balance on the ride in and out of the City. So at 10:30 AM I had finished the papers and went online to check my email and thought it would be a good idea to check the Swann’s site again to be certain I hadn’t misinterpreted things. Good thing I did as I had clearly misinterpreted things. Like their being open on Sunday which, as it turns out, they are not. I was particularly abashed as I had actually checked their hours over the weekend and when I saw 12 to 6PM I just assumed it was Saturday and Sunday as both Sotheby’s and Christies, the other two auction houses I visit, were both open both days. So I didn’t have to break my routine after all but I wasn’t pleased. The only good thing is that if I hadn’t gone back to look I would have found myself in New York City outside their building cursing up a storm and spewing invective, mostly aimed at myself. I will consider it a teaching lesson for my next visit there.

I was more successful this morning as I walked up to Sotheby’s and saw a nice preview for an auction of American art. It’s a fairly long walk and I confess to being tired out from the trip. I just finished reading the newspapers and closed my eyes and sat in the chair for a little while. Years ago I would have taken a nap but for the longest time I haven’t done that as my sleep at night can be spotty. I get up at least once if not twice  and going back to sleep is hit or miss. Of course if I didn’t get up my sheets might be a little spotty. Anyway, here I am.

This was not a blockbuster auction with superstar artists and million dollar paintings but there were some nice things in it. The first thing I encountered was an Augustus Saint-Gaudens bronze sculpture of Pan with his two pipes raised to this lips. This is something I would have given short shrift to not that long ago but this time I paid attention and was gratified by its beauty. And its surprisingly reasonable auction estimate of $5-$7,000. Of course I won’t be bidding but it’s nice to dream.  This was followed up by some watercolors by Andrew Wyeth which were much more pricy with estimates ranging from $30K to $60K. There were quite a few pieces by Fairfield Porter, anyone who actually pays attention to this weekly epistle might remember that he was prominently on exhibit at the Parrish Art Museum which I wound up not visiting for a number of reasons. His art is pleasant but not something I really will go out of my way to see and even with a lot of money I don’t think I would be bidding for his work. Moving along I came to two Norman Rockwell paintings, the first a design for a Holiday Plate, Xmas 1974, Scotty gets his tree which depicts a little boy with an axe holding his newly chopped down tree. I imagine Stephen King might be able to do something with that image. The other was a head and shoulders portrait of an elderly man. There were several paintings by Grandma Moses. Her real name was Anna Mary Robertson Moses and she lived to the advanced age of 101. She started her career late in life, in her late seventies, and became renowned and appreciated for her primitive style portraying rural scenes from an earlier time. There was one of Charles Demuth’s wonderful watercolors of fruit, this one peaches and a fig. I’ve spoken about Demuth before, his fruit and vegetable watercolors are some of the most beautiful depictions I’ve seen. His atelier overlooked a garden which his mother tended and from which he drew his inspiration for the watercolors. Very soft muted colors and very realistic. At his page on Wikipedia it says that he was friends with Georgia O’Keeffe and left her many of his paintings in his will. This watercolor was estimated to go for between $12 and $18K. Close by was a Georgia O’Keeffe watercolor of flowers which had a similar estimate. Then I came across two paintings by Jasper Francis Cropsey, one of the Hudson river painters I so admire. Two very beautiful landscapes, Shepherd’s Flock which was estimated at $15-$20K and a much larger painting of Greenwood Lake in New Jersey which was estimated at between $80-$120K. I like to visit the New York Historical Society because they have such a large collection of Hudson River painters with a number of Cropsey’s and I’ve seen him in many other museums and galleries, always beautiful depictions of nature. And I will end the tour with Francis Xavier Leyendecker, an illustrator from the turn of the 20th Century who appeared in magazines and books, interior and cover illustrations and advertisements.  We have an oil painting of The Burgave’s Farewell which must have appeared in Collier’s magazine as an illustration to a short story. It depicts a nobleman of probably the 18th or 19th Century, in fancy dress, at a table with a decanter and a glass in his hand and his eyes closed, presumably having just drank some poisoned wine. I will go out on a limb and assume he was the villain in the piece.

So, as I said, not a blockbuster but certainly a pleasant way to while away a morning. I love art but I don’t have any hanging on my walls for the reason that I am also a voracious reader and wall space is reserved for bookcases. If I should ever win the lottery I would hope to acquire a home that was big enough for both. And then it would be a pleasure to go to these auctions and find gems to fill those walls.

On that dreamlike note, let’s walk down to Flickr and see who stopped by this week.

Andy G.

A Mock Wedding with a Hairy Bride 1930s        

https://www.flickr.com/photos/striderv/2359231785/in/photostream/ 

Cute blue dress

https://www.flickr.com/photos/53516713@N06/15322240292

That's a guy. Forced to be dressed as a girl cosplay.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/yanavenged/15069903195

PICT0005

https://www.flickr.com/photos/104312886@N07/14938665598

Dressed-like-a-sissy

https://www.flickr.com/photos/radicalfeministrule/14939743457

White sissy dress

https://www.flickr.com/photos/53516713@N06/15061950976

Blue Velvet12

https://www.flickr.com/photos/ogutnik/14920248177

11012

https://www.flickr.com/photos/104258138@N03/14880624590

hearts and soles

https://www.flickr.com/photos/knessia/15100622905

Photo 3

https://www.flickr.com/photos/127205951@N05/15111180176

N o m i R u i z: singer and nicola formichetti's transgender muse (50,000 views)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/beccakiss/7309278022

1371         

https://www.flickr.com/photos/104258138@N03/15128653087

Offline samantha1

  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 159
  • Karma: +1120/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #17 on: September 28, 2014, 04:47:31 AM »
I  really like your weekly or even daily blog.When i open up my computer,i always go straight into this site to see what is new with your blogs.Keep it up.

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #18 on: September 28, 2014, 12:24:44 PM »
Thanks Samantha, glad you enjoy it.

Online andyg0404

  • Global Moderator
  • Winner of the Golden Panties Award
  • ******
  • Posts: 1214
  • Karma: +19708/-0
Re: It’s the Summer is here Flickr, or boy that was a short Spring.
« Reply #19 on: October 04, 2014, 06:04:25 PM »
Hello everybody and welcome back to My Weekly Flickr.

When I woke up yesterday morning and turned on the weather report it said that it would rain today, heavily, more than an inch. As Saturday mornings are my time to go to museums I was not pleased. Then when I got to work I went to the weather link and it had rain in the forecast all day. Let me correct that by saying it had rain and then showers listed during it’s hourly forecasts. I confess the difference between rain and showers is a subtlety lost on me.  Whatever you call it I will still be wet. Weather terminology can be a little obscure. I equally wonder at the difference between partly cloudy and partly sunny. Is that like the age old question of whether the glass is half empty or half full? My answer to that is that the glass is not only half empty but dirty and cracked. But I digress.  Based on this rather soggy forecast I thought I would have to stay home today and forego my trip to the Metropolitan Museum.  I wasn’t overly upset as I knew of no exhibits that I was anxious to see but I do like the exercise of the very long walk up to 81st Street and I don’t want to turn into someone who never goes out. Plenty of time for that later.

But when I awoke this morning it wasn’t really raining although it clearly had overnight. This time the weatherman told me that it would rain on and off and end in the afternoon. The end didn’t really affect me as I’m usually home by Noon or 12:30PM but I decided to chance it and go into New York City. On the way up it rained lightly and about ten blocks from the museum it came down a little harder but I made it inside without being soaked. When I left the museum it was raining much harder but I was lucky and I got to 79th Street just as the crosstown bus arrived. Got off and went down into the subway to go to the Port Authority and head home. Which I did in a rather roundabout way. When my Aunt passed away, and my biweekly trips to Queens ended, I thought I was free of the subway nightmares that had plagued me for so many years, what with the E train running on the F tracks or running local or not running at all. For the museums all I needed was the C train which seldom had problems. Until now that is. When I got downstairs the sign said no downtown trains at this station. At all. To go downtown you had to take the uptown train and then cross over and take the downtown train. And you had to take the uptown train to 125th Street because it ran express downtown. The museum is at 81st Street so I passed through 86th St, 96th St, 103rd St, 110th St ( you old timers may remember a very bad movie entitled “Across 110th Street” which took place in Harlem, 116th St, and finally 125th St. Then the downtown train skips those stops, in addition to 72nd and finally stops at 59th.  I continue on past 50th St to 42nd St where I get off to go the bus terminal. Of course if I wanted to go to any of the stations between 81st St and 59th St, I would have had to do what I did and then get out at 59th St and take an uptown local. It brings to mind the quaint old plaint, is this any way to run a railroad? It’s also why visitors from overseas, or from other states, for that matter can often be seen standing on a platform looking bewildered.

Well it seems it look me as long to get to the actual visit as it did to travel home but here we are. When I arrived I looked at the list of exhibits and was pleased to see that the new Japanese exhibit has opened,
“Kimono: A Modern History.” It consisted of kimonos, screens, wall hangings, small objects, large and small carved and gilded Bodhisattva statues and the wood block prints I enjoy. It was a wonderful exhibit. I’m not a big fan of clothing exhibitions but the intricacy of the work done to decorate the kimonos is extraordinary. While in some cases things were sewn onto the kimono, mostly the designs you see are actually made by sewing the threads of the design into the kimono. It’s amazing that this could be done, especially before the sewing machine when this was all done by hand. Truly these seamstresses were craftsmen or craftswomen. This is a link to the museum description of the exhibition. http://www.metmuseum.org/about-the-museum/press-room/exhibitions/2014/kimono  This is a link to an outside review with two nice images of wood block prints. http://fashionpluslifestyle.wordpress.com/2014/09/11/kimono-a-modern-history-at-the-metropolitan-museum-of-art/   And this is another link to the museum website that shows all the images in the exhibit. http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/objects?exhibitionId=%7b93F2A73E-D2AE-46A2-823B-A47219E55980%7d&rpp=90&pg=1 There are two pages of images.  I’m glad I didn’t let the foul weather deter me from my visit.

And so, on to the Flickrs.
Andy G.

Sailor Boy Scouts      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/no_onions/181333962   

Stefan      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/houseofsecrets/15204950759

School girls

https://www.flickr.com/photos/53516713@N06/14934318847

IMG_20140830_023948

https://www.flickr.com/photos/22813843@N06/15055199716

moshimoshi6

https://www.flickr.com/photos/53899402@N04/15125685955

CIEEUSAHS

https://www.flickr.com/photos/127261364@N06/15050788325

Gay wedding pic

https://www.flickr.com/photos/126050897@N04/15055850752

Sissy Art-043      

https://www.flickr.com/photos/114508153@N07/15193214687

Yasumasa Morimura

https://www.flickr.com/photos/beccakiss/4876996492

Barbie Girl (20)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/126461197@N06/14982877747

Pink Satin Bondage 7

https://www.flickr.com/photos/69985415@N00/14941850330

IMG_9655

https://www.flickr.com/photos/97251337@N05/14995040649


 

The more you give,

the more I can give back.

The dots in the map below represent every person who visited Betty's since May 17, 2020. Blinking dots show people currently here. However if you haven't clicked on anything in a couple minutes your dot won't blink until you click on something again.

























Web
Analytics

Hits to Betty's Pubs since Sept. 30th, 2004

eXTReMe Tracker

Website, forum design, software, & security on this site is copyrighted. It was made personally by Betty Pearl, of Betty Pearl's Pubs, Sissy Stories, buffalobetties, & pearlcorona. Betty's Pub is a non-profit organization & support group for the transgendered, & Fetware community. We don't sell anything, & we don't data mine your personal information & habits to sell like MOST other sites do. We respect your privacy & won't sell it out for a few bucks.

Site for: Sissy Stories, ABDL Stories, Sissy Art, Crossdressing, Transgender