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danielvalc

Daniel Valentine

didn’t you hear? cleanliness is next to godliness

19
posts
817
followers
1.2K
following

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago


I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago


I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago


I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

I’m having the best time ever


3
4
2 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago


Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Two months of men


3
1
4 months ago

Seen at an edgy transgressive film screening at the ivy house back in July. Alex and I had a nice time. There was a guy there that used to come into my old workplace occasionally who I had a crush on, but had never spoken to him. At the end of the screening we saw him walk off down the road with some girl that he hadn’t arrived with. Many such cases. Even so, some part of me was happy that someone got to sleep with him.


37
1
6 months ago

I don’t think it’s embarrassing to have a boyfriend, but I do think many people are miserable and don’t know what it means to truly love someone. These are some pics from my walk the other day.


59
5
6 months ago

I don’t think it’s embarrassing to have a boyfriend, but I do think many people are miserable and don’t know what it means to truly love someone. These are some pics from my walk the other day.


59
5
6 months ago

I don’t think it’s embarrassing to have a boyfriend, but I do think many people are miserable and don’t know what it means to truly love someone. These are some pics from my walk the other day.


59
5
6 months ago

I don’t think it’s embarrassing to have a boyfriend, but I do think many people are miserable and don’t know what it means to truly love someone. These are some pics from my walk the other day.


59
5
6 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

Alex and I had the best time at the David Lynch tribute conceived by @davidcoulter at @southbankcentre / @jehnnybeth was my fave (slide 9) 🖤


3
1
8 months ago

I am in love with going through my camera roll and inverting pics #naturalinvert #borninvert


3
2
8 months ago

I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you


3
8 months ago

I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you


3
8 months ago

I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you


3
8 months ago

I love you, I love you, I love you, I love you


3
8 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

Doing my bit for gender: performative reading, manspreading.

Currently reading The Naked Civil Servant by Quentin Crisp. He does a remarkable job of making himself out to be a haggard old crone, dashing through the streets of London like a witch, yet also reveals that he has many friends who seem to stay with him over the years. Best of all are his sentences, nominative determinism strikes again: they are crisp. As Simon Gray says, quoted on the back cover, he is ‘one of mannered bitchiness’, shaping what should be known as the homosexual tongue, and giving Wilde a run for his money. It doesn’t surprise me that in an interview with Stuart Young, Crisp is quoted saying “I am of course, influenced by the greatest lyricist that ever lived, the Bequiffed One known only as Morrissey”, although this book was written in 1968, nearly 20 years prior to The Smiths’ first album. So mannered bitchiness must be part of the ‘illness’ (as he calls it).

Crisp sounds dirty, which surprises me.
‘At the weekend we often sat in the Czechs’ basement flat talking of sex and eating a kind of sea-wrack produced by putting everything that guests brought into a huge saucepan that stood over the eternal flame of the studio stove. When no one brought anything, there remained the residual slime of past ages of prosperity. This we consumed with relish.’

I love Crisp. He alienated himself from his own homosexuality, meaning he was able to view the rest of them/us for what we really were.

‘Homosexuals are sincerely interested. […] Every detail of the lives of real people, however mundane it may be, seems romantic to them. Romance is that enchantment that distance lends to things and homosexuals are in a different world’

‘Homosexuals were ashamed. They resented not being in the mainstream of life. The feeling varied from anguish to irrevocable exile. It had little to do with God or the neighbours or the police. It was private and irremediable.’


3
9 months ago

A little message from the man upstairs


3
3 years ago

A photo of South East London Combined Heat & Power Consortium from the other week. This giant organismic machine sits in South London, rolling up a fag of our discarded shit and smoking it all out.

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#35mm #filmphotography #streetphotography #art #research #bwphotography #powerstation


3
1
3 years ago

5 years ago

Water droplets dancing in the morning sunlight on a car windscreen. Incidentally mirroring @arca1000000 ‘s new visuals.


42
1
5 years ago


Instagram Stories geheim ansehen

Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.

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Geben Sie einen öffentlichen Benutzernamen ein, um Stories anzusehen oder herunterzuladen. Der Dienst generiert direkte Links, um Inhalte lokal zu speichern.