Head Stone Gallery
plaguebaby
tiffany campbell
g0lddust-girl
philipines girls
yesfoulnerdcollection
Keith on the back cover of Goats Head Soup which was released 40 years ago.
Harry Styles Packslike or reblog if you save/use
A silver headband inlaid with red precious stones Afghanistan Islamic Oxus region
. no We Heart It. weheartit.com/entry/82238530/via/teddypicker__
Goat’s Head Pendant with Garnet stones for eyes.
Harry Styles Packslike or reblog if you save/use
thegoldenyearz: The Rolling Stones for Goats Head Soup photoshoot by David Bailey, 1973
Ombre Crystal Crown: $50.00✨ ✨ ✨ ✨ ✨ ✨✨☼Hand selected pieces of high quality Ombre, 3 tone Quartz ar
When asked to provide headlines describing InterseXtions program this past this year, our teen staff
originalplumbing:Hirstory lesson time! When heading to all your “Pride” parties this weekend, don’t
kksart:12/20/18 - ‘phases’, ceramic (white stoneware)this piece actually has interchangeable heads!
Klara Kristalova (Czech, b. 1967, Prague, Czech Republic, based Norrtälje, Sweden) - 1: She’s
kksart: 12/20/18 - ‘phases’, ceramic (white stoneware) this piece actually has interchangeable heads
Head of Mercury. Emmanuel Hannaux, c1895. France.
ortut:Jindra Vikova - Talk, 1993
Head of Asclepius. Roman copy (second half of 2nd cent. CE) after a mid-4th cent. BCE Greek origina
Canopic jar lid (limestone) in the shape of a falcon head, representing the deity Qebehsenuef, one o
Portrait head of Amenhotep III, shown wearing the double crown and ceremonial beard. Artist unknown
Head of a Buddhist guardian king, perhaps Tseng-ch’ang (=Sanskrit Virudhaka), regent of the south. U
Ancient Egyptian column capital (limestone) in the shape of the head of the goddess Hathor. The col
Monumental marble head of the Roman goddess Juno, wearing a diadem. Found at Vienne (ancient Vienna
Head of Zeus. Artist unknown; Flavian period (69-96 CE). From Ephesus; now in the Ephesus Archaeol
Limestone head, identified as the Ptolemaic queen Arsinoe II. Artist unknown; 278-270 BCE (reign of
Marble head of the Roman deity Jupiter. Artist unknown; 2nd cent. CE. Now in the Spurlock Museum,
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