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zeesw

Zorawar Waraich

🧑🏽‍💻 social video @britishvogue
🧚🏽‍♂️ nonbinary punjabi @crumbagency
📷 photography @fuckoffaunty

250
posts
3.5K
followers
12.7K
following

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago


I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago


I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago


I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

I am so honoured to have written about Bandi Chhor Divas for @britishvogue and to have tapped the incredible @hark1karan to capture the Sikh community in Southall.

At a time when the Ambanis are hosting galas at the British Museum, conservative South Asian politicians are throwing Diwali parties at 10 Downing Street, and the Indian Prime Minister is marking the festival with remarks about war with Pakistan–these images serve as a reminder that cross-cultural solidarity has always existed among South Asian communities, far beyond any single festival. A reminder of the importance of resisting erasure, standing firm against Islamophobia, and raising an eyebrow at the yassified versions of South Asian culture that brands try to cash in on every Diwali.

Link in bio to read the full piece and take in these heart warming images.


1.7K
139
6 months ago

@ayham_hassan_99 and the cast behind the scenes @bafcsm—having what I think were the most important conversations in the room—was a reminder of why we care about what we wear and where we come from. I still have chills from hearing about the way these textiles were brought from Palestine to London. The most meaningful social video I’ve made @britishvogue #freepalestine 🇵🇸


2.5K
59
11 months ago


5 looks for 5 days of London Fashion Week 🧚🏽‍♂️ which look is your fav? @londonfashionweek


852
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2 years ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Left work to direct some videos for a documentary about work 🤷🏽‍♂️ and also DonatellaVERSACE💜 forever.

Thank you the THEE TEAM y’all have my heart.

Director @zeesw
DOP @olaakinlade_
Producer @heyitsrashida
IRL Fashion Team @char_rutter & @jxneill

This documentary is about us.


1.2K
137
3 weeks ago

Interviewing the legendary @shreyaghoshal ahead of her London show was a full-circle moment I’ll never forget. As a kid I wanted to be every Bollywood heroine she lent her voice to, not to mention Paro in Devdas. Hearing her sing “Bairi Piya” right in front of me!? My inner child was healed. And I got to see her incredible sold-out performance with my mom, on the very day we lost the legend Asha Bhosle. Still have chills. It was such a beautiful experience to be in the same room with so many South Asian people from so many different backgrounds all united by a love for music and the sounds of our cultures.


709
37
1 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

all in a weeks work darling sweetie & they don’t call it a job for nothing


518
51
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

choose your @gucci fighter 🧚🏽
playing dress up in demna’s gucci for BV shopping 👔


556
36
2 months ago

directing this one is a momenttt but I can’t put the feeling in better words than @rad.seth

“I don’t know about you, but I haven’t been feeling particularly optimistic lately – what with the rise of the far right, the continued framing of immigration as some great evil to be vanquished, and Reform MP Sarah Pochin openly saying on TV: “It drives me mad seeing adverts full of Black and Asian people.”

In reality, we’ve never been given much space, and almost always relegated to the sidelines. But this feels like a rare victory. And it’s one I will be celebrating.”

Director: @ZeeSW
Director of Photography: @OlaAkinlade_
Producer: @HeyltsRashida
Stylist: @SarrJamois
Hairstylist: @SamMcknight1
Make-Up Artist: @MelArter
Manicurist: @ManicuredBySimone


318
55
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

One day you will look at those photos with much kinder eyes, and say, “dear God, I was a beautiful thing!” — one of the most soft and impactful lines Catherine O’Hara delivered as Moira Rose. RIP queen.

Thank you @hark1karan & @nahwandjaff for capturing me on film. 🤍


508
67
3 months ago

it’s fashion dallliiinnn ’ @alexconsani! coupla bay area girls taking a morning walk in London dallliinnn


3
13
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

2016 was really the year. I used to post long rants about my experiences of racism as a young queer south asian person online while I was finishing my degree and reading so much about race and gender. I came out to my family, I stopped letting the white people around me get away with their microagressions, lost all my friends because of it, got banned from gay bars for calling out racist fancy dress parties and fell out with many a zionist. I was so angry at the world but also so full of love and excitement to change it. I made beautiful connections, terrible collages of myself and others in south asian jewellery and started to be critical of the diaspora love poems we all wrote to—an ironically fetishised image of—our own culture. I started to believe I belonged in the creative industry, and knew I’d carve my way in—get in front of the camera, take pictures with and of friends. I became a nightlife poster child, dealt with the consequences of getting lost in the idea of community within nightlife and came out of it alone again, but ready to rebuild. It was such a painful, beautiful important time and it will stay with me forever.


666
54
3 months ago

brown girl brown fit is always gonna eat.

my winter shopping checklist for @britishvogue is all brown to match my winter wardrobe. (avail on my story for 24h)


513
63
5 months ago

brown girl brown fit is always gonna eat.

my winter shopping checklist for @britishvogue is all brown to match my winter wardrobe. (avail on my story for 24h)


513
63
5 months ago

brown girl brown fit is always gonna eat.

my winter shopping checklist for @britishvogue is all brown to match my winter wardrobe. (avail on my story for 24h)


513
63
5 months ago

brown girl brown fit is always gonna eat.

my winter shopping checklist for @britishvogue is all brown to match my winter wardrobe. (avail on my story for 24h)


513
63
5 months ago

brown girl brown fit is always gonna eat.

my winter shopping checklist for @britishvogue is all brown to match my winter wardrobe. (avail on my story for 24h)


513
63
5 months ago


Ver Historias de Instagram en Secreto

El Instagram Story Viewer es una herramienta sencilla que te permite ver y guardar en secreto historias, videos, fotos o IGTV de Instagram. Con este servicio, puedes descargar contenido y disfrutarlo sin conexión cuando lo desees. Si encuentras algo interesante en Instagram que quieras revisar más tarde o si prefieres ver historias de forma anónima, nuestro visor es perfecto para ti. Anonstories ofrece una excelente solución para mantener tu identidad oculta. Instagram lanzó la función de Historias en agosto de 2023, adoptada rápidamente por otras plataformas debido a su formato dinámico y temporal. Las Historias permiten a los usuarios compartir actualizaciones rápidas, como fotos, videos o selfies, mejoradas con texto, emojis o filtros, y son visibles por solo 24 horas. Este marco de tiempo limitado genera un alto compromiso en comparación con las publicaciones regulares. En el mundo actual, las Historias son una de las formas más populares de conectar y comunicarse en redes sociales. Sin embargo, al ver una Historia, el creador puede ver tu nombre en su lista de visualizaciones, lo cual puede ser una preocupación de privacidad. ¿Qué hacer si deseas explorar Historias sin ser detectado? Aquí es donde Anonstories resulta útil. Te permite ver contenido público de Instagram sin revelar tu identidad. Simplemente ingresa el nombre de usuario del perfil que te interesa, y la herramienta mostrará sus Historias más recientes. Funciones de Anonstories Viewer: - Navegación anónima: Mira Historias sin aparecer en la lista de visualizaciones. - Sin cuenta requerida: Ve contenido público sin necesidad de registrarte en Instagram. - Descarga de contenido: Guarda cualquier Historia directamente en tu dispositivo para usarla sin conexión. - Ver Destacados: Accede a Destacados de Instagram, incluso fuera del período de 24 horas. - Monitoreo de reposts: Rastrea reposts o niveles de compromiso en Historias de perfiles personales. Limitaciones: - Esta herramienta solo funciona con cuentas públicas; las cuentas privadas permanecen inaccesibles. Beneficios: - Amigable con la privacidad: Mira cualquier contenido de Instagram sin ser detectado. - Fácil y sencillo: Sin instalación de aplicaciones ni registro necesario. - Herramientas exclusivas: Descarga y gestiona contenido de formas que Instagram no ofrece.