Lucy Van
- a disgrace to the forces of evil -
Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

Hello my dears,
I hope this year will be kind to all of us.
Here’s a new release from us:
permanentdraft.bandcamp.com/album/material-3
MATERIAL, out on the 13th of February 2026
200 copies on black vinyl, with an accompanying 56-page booklet, printed on uncoated paper, paperback
Mixed by Aude Van Wyller
Mastered by Joe Talia
Artwork and photos by Christine
Designed by Kyla Arsadjaja
Distributed by state51
Enquiries: distro@state51.com
Aude Van Wyller (aka Oï les Ox aka AI les Axes) joins forces with acclaimed poet Lucy Van, author of The Open (2021) and Australian Women’s Historical Photography (2024). This debut collaboration weaves together Aude’s ambient mutations with Lucy’s killer words.
Part of the proceeds will go to ACT UP
Love and strength to you all.
xxx

“There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait.”
– Robin Wall Kimmerer
🌾 The Braided Gift, edited by @shari.lynelle and Lucy Van, is now live.
Visit the link in our bio to read the full issue and the editors’ braided introduction—a meditation on generosity, practice and poetic kinship.
This issue gathers new poems by 38 Australian and international poets, exploring the gift in all its tender, tangled and surprising forms—from practising and making, to mourning, remembering and renewal.
🪶 The braid moves through the collection as both image and method: strands of thought, feeling and practice woven together into something more than their parts. Each poem becomes an act of joining, of holding tension and release, resistance and care, within the same rhythmic gesture.
Drawing on Antonia Pont’s philosophy of practising, these poems linger in the small repetitions of attention—those gestures that turn dailiness into devotion. Practising, as Pont writes, is not about performance or perfection but about the slow art of staying with: returning, noticing and letting the ordinary become luminous. Within this issue, practising becomes a kind of ecological ethics, a way of being in time that honours persistence, listening and care.
To braid, as Kimmerer writes, is to “remember to remember”: to entwine the living threads of memory, ecology and relationship. The Braided Gift honours that motion—the looping, unspooling and rejoining that marks the making of poetry itself.
🐚 These poems are gifts of attention: to the soil and sea, to the body and its griefs, to the pulse of community and the breath of the more-than-human world. Together, they ask what it means to write and live generously—not in the sense of giving away, but of giving toward: a continual movement of reciprocity and return.
Cover image: Kangaroo Grass by Jacob Yugovic, with gratitude.
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#TheBraidedGift #PlumwoodMountainJournal #AustralianPoetry #Ecopoetry #PoetryasPractice #GiftEconomy #PoeticKinship #PoetryCommunity

“There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait.”
– Robin Wall Kimmerer
🌾 The Braided Gift, edited by @shari.lynelle and Lucy Van, is now live.
Visit the link in our bio to read the full issue and the editors’ braided introduction—a meditation on generosity, practice and poetic kinship.
This issue gathers new poems by 38 Australian and international poets, exploring the gift in all its tender, tangled and surprising forms—from practising and making, to mourning, remembering and renewal.
🪶 The braid moves through the collection as both image and method: strands of thought, feeling and practice woven together into something more than their parts. Each poem becomes an act of joining, of holding tension and release, resistance and care, within the same rhythmic gesture.
Drawing on Antonia Pont’s philosophy of practising, these poems linger in the small repetitions of attention—those gestures that turn dailiness into devotion. Practising, as Pont writes, is not about performance or perfection but about the slow art of staying with: returning, noticing and letting the ordinary become luminous. Within this issue, practising becomes a kind of ecological ethics, a way of being in time that honours persistence, listening and care.
To braid, as Kimmerer writes, is to “remember to remember”: to entwine the living threads of memory, ecology and relationship. The Braided Gift honours that motion—the looping, unspooling and rejoining that marks the making of poetry itself.
🐚 These poems are gifts of attention: to the soil and sea, to the body and its griefs, to the pulse of community and the breath of the more-than-human world. Together, they ask what it means to write and live generously—not in the sense of giving away, but of giving toward: a continual movement of reciprocity and return.
Cover image: Kangaroo Grass by Jacob Yugovic, with gratitude.
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#TheBraidedGift #PlumwoodMountainJournal #AustralianPoetry #Ecopoetry #PoetryasPractice #GiftEconomy #PoeticKinship #PoetryCommunity

“There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait.”
– Robin Wall Kimmerer
🌾 The Braided Gift, edited by @shari.lynelle and Lucy Van, is now live.
Visit the link in our bio to read the full issue and the editors’ braided introduction—a meditation on generosity, practice and poetic kinship.
This issue gathers new poems by 38 Australian and international poets, exploring the gift in all its tender, tangled and surprising forms—from practising and making, to mourning, remembering and renewal.
🪶 The braid moves through the collection as both image and method: strands of thought, feeling and practice woven together into something more than their parts. Each poem becomes an act of joining, of holding tension and release, resistance and care, within the same rhythmic gesture.
Drawing on Antonia Pont’s philosophy of practising, these poems linger in the small repetitions of attention—those gestures that turn dailiness into devotion. Practising, as Pont writes, is not about performance or perfection but about the slow art of staying with: returning, noticing and letting the ordinary become luminous. Within this issue, practising becomes a kind of ecological ethics, a way of being in time that honours persistence, listening and care.
To braid, as Kimmerer writes, is to “remember to remember”: to entwine the living threads of memory, ecology and relationship. The Braided Gift honours that motion—the looping, unspooling and rejoining that marks the making of poetry itself.
🐚 These poems are gifts of attention: to the soil and sea, to the body and its griefs, to the pulse of community and the breath of the more-than-human world. Together, they ask what it means to write and live generously—not in the sense of giving away, but of giving toward: a continual movement of reciprocity and return.
Cover image: Kangaroo Grass by Jacob Yugovic, with gratitude.
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#TheBraidedGift #PlumwoodMountainJournal #AustralianPoetry #Ecopoetry #PoetryasPractice #GiftEconomy #PoeticKinship #PoetryCommunity

“There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait.”
– Robin Wall Kimmerer
🌾 The Braided Gift, edited by @shari.lynelle and Lucy Van, is now live.
Visit the link in our bio to read the full issue and the editors’ braided introduction—a meditation on generosity, practice and poetic kinship.
This issue gathers new poems by 38 Australian and international poets, exploring the gift in all its tender, tangled and surprising forms—from practising and making, to mourning, remembering and renewal.
🪶 The braid moves through the collection as both image and method: strands of thought, feeling and practice woven together into something more than their parts. Each poem becomes an act of joining, of holding tension and release, resistance and care, within the same rhythmic gesture.
Drawing on Antonia Pont’s philosophy of practising, these poems linger in the small repetitions of attention—those gestures that turn dailiness into devotion. Practising, as Pont writes, is not about performance or perfection but about the slow art of staying with: returning, noticing and letting the ordinary become luminous. Within this issue, practising becomes a kind of ecological ethics, a way of being in time that honours persistence, listening and care.
To braid, as Kimmerer writes, is to “remember to remember”: to entwine the living threads of memory, ecology and relationship. The Braided Gift honours that motion—the looping, unspooling and rejoining that marks the making of poetry itself.
🐚 These poems are gifts of attention: to the soil and sea, to the body and its griefs, to the pulse of community and the breath of the more-than-human world. Together, they ask what it means to write and live generously—not in the sense of giving away, but of giving toward: a continual movement of reciprocity and return.
Cover image: Kangaroo Grass by Jacob Yugovic, with gratitude.
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#TheBraidedGift #PlumwoodMountainJournal #AustralianPoetry #Ecopoetry #PoetryasPractice #GiftEconomy #PoeticKinship #PoetryCommunity

“There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait.”
– Robin Wall Kimmerer
🌾 The Braided Gift, edited by @shari.lynelle and Lucy Van, is now live.
Visit the link in our bio to read the full issue and the editors’ braided introduction—a meditation on generosity, practice and poetic kinship.
This issue gathers new poems by 38 Australian and international poets, exploring the gift in all its tender, tangled and surprising forms—from practising and making, to mourning, remembering and renewal.
🪶 The braid moves through the collection as both image and method: strands of thought, feeling and practice woven together into something more than their parts. Each poem becomes an act of joining, of holding tension and release, resistance and care, within the same rhythmic gesture.
Drawing on Antonia Pont’s philosophy of practising, these poems linger in the small repetitions of attention—those gestures that turn dailiness into devotion. Practising, as Pont writes, is not about performance or perfection but about the slow art of staying with: returning, noticing and letting the ordinary become luminous. Within this issue, practising becomes a kind of ecological ethics, a way of being in time that honours persistence, listening and care.
To braid, as Kimmerer writes, is to “remember to remember”: to entwine the living threads of memory, ecology and relationship. The Braided Gift honours that motion—the looping, unspooling and rejoining that marks the making of poetry itself.
🐚 These poems are gifts of attention: to the soil and sea, to the body and its griefs, to the pulse of community and the breath of the more-than-human world. Together, they ask what it means to write and live generously—not in the sense of giving away, but of giving toward: a continual movement of reciprocity and return.
Cover image: Kangaroo Grass by Jacob Yugovic, with gratitude.
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#TheBraidedGift #PlumwoodMountainJournal #AustralianPoetry #Ecopoetry #PoetryasPractice #GiftEconomy #PoeticKinship #PoetryCommunity

interview #228 / @busey____ in conversation with @eaeolian
photographed by @l___j___m___

interview #228 / @busey____ in conversation with @eaeolian
photographs by @l___j___m___

interview #228 / @busey____ in conversation with @eaeolian
photographs by @l___j___m___

interview #228 / @busey____ in conversation with @eaeolian
photographs by @l___j___m___

How do writers get their start as critics? Is there a way to balance humility with critical rigour? And does humour have a role to play in criticism?
In the latest episode of Fully Lit, we come to you live from @parramattas.lit , where critics Max Easton, Eda Gunaydin @edapresents and Lucy Van @busey____joined our very own James Jiang for a spirited conversation about the pleasures and rewards of writing criticism.
Be inspired by these three critics as they discuss what makes them take to their keyboards – and how they preserve their enthusiasm along with their exactitude. The event, Critics Rejoice, was recorded on September 6 as part of the Parramatta’s Lit and Sydney Fringe Festivals.
LINK IN BIO!

How do writers get their start as critics? Is there a way to balance humility with critical rigour? And does humour have a role to play in criticism?
In the latest episode of Fully Lit, we come to you live from @parramattas.lit , where critics Max Easton, Eda Gunaydin @edapresents and Lucy Van @busey____joined our very own James Jiang for a spirited conversation about the pleasures and rewards of writing criticism.
Be inspired by these three critics as they discuss what makes them take to their keyboards – and how they preserve their enthusiasm along with their exactitude. The event, Critics Rejoice, was recorded on September 6 as part of the Parramatta’s Lit and Sydney Fringe Festivals.
LINK IN BIO!

How do writers get their start as critics? Is there a way to balance humility with critical rigour? And does humour have a role to play in criticism?
In the latest episode of Fully Lit, we come to you live from @parramattas.lit , where critics Max Easton, Eda Gunaydin @edapresents and Lucy Van @busey____joined our very own James Jiang for a spirited conversation about the pleasures and rewards of writing criticism.
Be inspired by these three critics as they discuss what makes them take to their keyboards – and how they preserve their enthusiasm along with their exactitude. The event, Critics Rejoice, was recorded on September 6 as part of the Parramatta’s Lit and Sydney Fringe Festivals.
LINK IN BIO!

How do writers get their start as critics? Is there a way to balance humility with critical rigour? And does humour have a role to play in criticism?
In the latest episode of Fully Lit, we come to you live from @parramattas.lit , where critics Max Easton, Eda Gunaydin @edapresents and Lucy Van @busey____joined our very own James Jiang for a spirited conversation about the pleasures and rewards of writing criticism.
Be inspired by these three critics as they discuss what makes them take to their keyboards – and how they preserve their enthusiasm along with their exactitude. The event, Critics Rejoice, was recorded on September 6 as part of the Parramatta’s Lit and Sydney Fringe Festivals.
LINK IN BIO!

Join a supportive community of poets and work on your project under the guidance of award-winning writer and researcher @busey____ ✏️ Register now to secure your spot (link in bio)

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
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.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
.
.
.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
.
.
.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
.
.
.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

🌾 Submissions open: The Braided Gift, edited by Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van.
“We have forgotten how to give gifts, Theodor Adorno once suggested, since giving implicates ‘thinking of the other as a subject: the opposite of forgetfulness’: a braided thought if ever there was one. The gift braids remembrance of someone, and somewhere, with its something. To forget to give is to forget to remember; to remember this forgetting is itself a braiding with time, making a loop in the weaving practice of memory.
This edition of Plumwood Mountain Journal invites poets to respond to the notion of the gift, and gift economies more generally, using the ‘braid’ as a conceptual tool to think and to practice with”, editors Shari Lynelle and Lucy Van, write.
🌿
We invite you to explore the gift as a practice – of memory, resistance, care, and connection. How does your writing braid with other forms of practising – dancing, yoga, sex, sculpture, music? What do you tend, offer, remember, or reimagine through your poetic practice?
Whether rooted in daily rituals or ancestral memory, let your poems carry the textures of your other practices – those gestures, rhythms, and devotions that shape how you live beside and with the earth.
📖To read the richly woven call out by@shari.lynelle and @busey____, visit the link in our bio.
Shari Lynelle, also known as Shari Kocher, is a Deaf Australian poet. She is the author of Foxstruck and Other Collisions (Puncher & Wattmann, 2021) and The Non-Sequitur of Snow (Puncher & Wattmann, 2015).
Lucy Van writes poetry and criticism. She is the author of The Open (Cordite, 2021). With Anne Maxwell, her new book is Australian Women’s Historical Photography: Other Times, Other Views (Anthem, 2024).
.
.
.
.
#PoetrySubmissions #OpenCall #AustralianPoets #Ecopoetry #EnvironmentalWriting #WritingAsPractice #PoetryOfPlace #EcoWriters #WritingTheEnvironment #PoetryasPractice #PlumwoodMountainJournal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

Our most tender gratitudeto everybody who came and spent time with us in our DRIVEWAY last month 🦋 Biggest love to the artists Autumn Royal and Lucy Van who performed a new iteration of their poem, 'Breaking Lines.' It was a real treat to share space with you all 💙
"My work shall be as obscure as love."
@temperate.season & @busey____ 🩵
•
In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne through their Annual Arts Grants Program.
Drinks most kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal

💠 DRIVEWAY THIS SAT 29 MARCH 4PM 💠
Join us this Saturday for an exclusive 2025 iteration of ‘Breaking Lines’, written in a dilating fugue by Autumn Royal and Lucy Van, to be restaged for DRIVEWAY at KINGS.
From the artists:
‘What pangs of hope we share for our exchange to turn to something we desire as a form of alleviation. “Fear of breakdown,” writes Donald Winnicott, “is the fear of a breakdown that has already been experienced.” Holding Winnicott’s insight close—unfinished, fragmentary, poetic—we return to our breaking, again-to-be-broken lines. We repeat the breaking of our turns and forms with the hope we might share our pangs again, respecting the proliferation of cycles—remembering all lives are the lives of the mind and need not ever be beautiful.’
@temperate.season
@busey____
Autumn Royal creates drama, poetry, and criticism.
Lucy Van writes poetry. She is currently translating Li Bai.
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This event is free. Register to attend via link in bio 🌟
DRIVEWAY is a new performance program at KINGS Artist-Run of monthly public events such as performances, film screenings, poetry readings, and more. In 2025, this initiative is supported by @cityofmelbourne 🌱
🥂 Drinks kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal
•
📸: @temperate.season
[ID]: Blue ink and water crossing over one another in stains and lines across a cream page

NEW DRIVEWAY INCOMING 🥳
We're so excited to announce our second DRIVEWAY event of the year 'Breaking Lines' with Autumn Royal and Lucy Van 💠
✨️ DRIVEWAY PERFORMANCE SAT 29 MARCH, 4PM ✨️
From the artists:
‘What pangs of hope we share for our exchange to turn to something we desire as a form of alleviation. “Fear of breakdown,” writes Donald Winnicott, “is the fear of a breakdown that has already been experienced.” Holding Winnicott’s insight close—unfinished, fragmentary, poetic—we return to our breaking, again-to-be-broken lines. We repeat the breaking of our turns and forms with the hope we might share our pangs again, respecting the proliferation of
cycles—remembering all lives are the lives of the mind and need not ever be beautiful.’
An exclusive 2025 iteration of ‘Breaking Lines’, written in a dilating fugue by Autumn Royal and Lucy Van, will be restaged for DRIVEWAY at KINGS.
We look forward to seeing you all there 💙
@temperate.season
@busey____
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In 2025 DRIVEWAY is supported by @cityofmelbourne
🥂 Drinks kindly sponsored by @littlebrunswickwineco and @heapsnormal
-
Image: Autumn Royal, Breaking Lines 1
[ID]: Blue water / ink running over cream-coloured paper, at times crossing over one another, overlaying lines
Instagram Story Viewer to proste narzędzie, które pozwala na ciche oglądanie i zapisywanie historii Instagram, filmów, zdjęć lub IGTV. Dzięki tej usłudze możesz pobrać zawartość i cieszyć się nią offline, kiedy chcesz. Jeśli znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie, co chcesz sprawdzić później, lub chcesz oglądać historie pozostając anonimowym, nasz Viewer jest idealny dla Ciebie. Anonstories oferuje doskonałe rozwiązanie do ukrywania swojej tożsamości. Instagram po raz pierwszy uruchomił funkcję historii w sierpniu 2023 roku, która szybko została zaadoptowana przez inne platformy ze względu na jej angażujący, czasowo ograniczony format. Historie pozwalają użytkownikom dzielić się szybkimi aktualizacjami, czy to zdjęciami, filmami, czy selfie, wzbogaconymi o tekst, emotikony lub filtry, i są widoczne tylko przez 24 godziny. Ten ograniczony czas sprawia, że historie cieszą się dużym zaangażowaniem w porównaniu do zwykłych postów. W dzisiejszym świecie historie to jeden z najpopularniejszych sposobów komunikacji na mediach społecznościowych. Jednak gdy oglądasz historię, twórca może zobaczyć Twoje imię na liście oglądających, co może stanowić problem związany z prywatnością. Co jeśli chcesz przeglądać historie, nie będąc zauważonym? Tutaj Anonstories staje się przydatne. Umożliwia oglądanie publicznej zawartości Instagram bez ujawniania tożsamości. Wystarczy wpisać nazwę użytkownika profilu, który Cię interesuje, a narzędzie wyświetli ich najnowsze historie. Cechy Anonstories Viewer: - Anonimowe przeglądanie: Oglądaj historie bez pojawiania się na liście oglądających. - Brak konta: Oglądaj publiczną zawartość bez logowania się na konto Instagram. - Pobieranie zawartości: Zapisuj dowolną zawartość historii bezpośrednio na swoje urządzenie do użytku offline. - Przeglądaj najważniejsze: Dostęp do Instagram Highlights, nawet po 24 godzinach. - Monitorowanie repostów: Śledź reposty lub poziom zaangażowania w historię na prywatnych profilach. Ograniczenia: - Narzędzie działa tylko z publicznymi kontami; konta prywatne pozostają niedostępne. Korzyści: - Przyjazne dla prywatności: Oglądaj zawartość Instagram bez bycia zauważonym. - Proste i łatwe: Brak potrzeby instalacji aplikacji lub rejestracji. - Ekskluzywne narzędzia: Pobieraj i zarządzaj zawartością w sposób, którego Instagram nie oferuje.
Śledź aktualizacje na Instagramie dyskretnie, chroniąc swoją prywatność i pozostając anonimowym.
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To darmowe narzędzie pozwala oglądać historie Instagram anonimowo, zapewniając, że Twoja aktywność pozostaje ukryta przed twórcą historii.
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Użytkownicy mogą oglądać publiczne historie, wpisując nazwę użytkownika – bez konieczności zakładania konta.
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Wpisz publiczną nazwę użytkownika, aby oglądać lub pobrać historie. Usługa generuje bezpośrednie linki do zapis