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@yes-zeri / yes-zeri.tumblr.com

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Remember lockdown?

I mean REALLY remember. 

-How at the beginning we had no clue how long it was going to last and if we had we wouldn’t have believed it?

-How the news from everywhere was so terrifying and uncertain?

-That insanely disturbing version of “Imagine” we were subjected to?

-That first mask you got?

-Losing all track of time?

The list gets long. So much confusion, so much illness and loss, cabin fever, introspection. Everyone just trying to cope and survive and help each other to do the same.

Well, I started a project right at the beginning of lockdown to help myself and whoever wanted to join in, to process some of these feelings and to find a way through together, not just the pandemic but as was revealed to us all, life itself.

The result was the Star & Crown Oracle. The name is a play on the word “Corona” which means both “Star” and “Crown.”

27 artists and myself collaborated to create an amazing 59-card Oracle deck.  This deck is an inspired expression of love and hope and survival that speaks not just to the time it was made, but to all the times we are faced with the strange and unknown and doing so with courage and spirit.

Star & Crown Oracle is on special offer right now directly from my website.

Greet the change of season with this one-of-a-kind, limited edition deck.

Order now and get free shipping worldwide. 

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reblogged

Rheum nobile, aka the Sikkim rhubarb or noble rhubarb, is a giant herbaceous plant native to the Himalaya, from northeastern Afghanistan, east through northern Pakistan and India, Nepal, Sikkim (in India), Bhutan, and Tibet to Myanmar, occurring in the alpine zone at 4000–4800 m altitude.

At 1–2 m tall, it towers above the other shrubs and low herbs in its habitat, and it is visible across valleys a mile away.

R. nobile is often called a glasshouse plant because of its outer curtain of translucent leaves which pass visible light, creating a greenhouse effect, while blocking ultraviolet radiation. These are likely defenses against the increased UV-B exposure and extreme cold in its high altitude range.

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