Better Images from Tumblr

julesduchoad:

screentonetv:

A friendly commenter @nawba​ taught me how to find big uncompressed images on Tumblr. Thank you @nawba!! This might not work forever or for everyone but it works well for me!

  1. Right click the image to get the image URL.
  2. Replace “https://78.media.tumblr.com/” at the beginning of the URL with “https://s3.amazonaws.com/data.tumblr.com/”
  3. Replace “_1280.jpg” at the end of the URL with “_raw.jpg”

This should give you an image that’s probably bigger and definitely clearer (less compressed) than what you see on the Tumblr dashboard or on the usual web page. 

You can try it yourself with this drawing:

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I dislike how Tumblr compresses my images. At least now I can find good copies of my images via my own blog, if not on my own blog. Also it helps when looking for cool wallpaper or background images.

(If I explained this wrong or I’m missing something, please tell me, so I can amend this post.)

Cool trick!

ryannorth:

davidmalki:

questionableadvice:

silvermarmoset:

questionableadvice:

~ “Progress”1915 editorial cartoon

Society despairs of the Modern Woman, 1915 style

History geek note: Now I’m imagining an editorial cartoon from 1615 comparing “Ye Moderne Bible Reading Woman” with the good, old-fashioned women from 1315 who didn’t insist on learning to read the bible for themselves but were content to have a learned Man of the Church interpret it for them. I’d try drawing it myself if I could draw anything other then stick figures.

The editorial cartoon from 1615 you imagine actually exists! Or at least, something a lot like it.

This is an illustration from the 1600s. First picture shows the good old days, when people carried around lances to stab people with and we actually read literature and wore spurred boots. The second picture is THE DEGENERATE PRESENT, where all these 1600s millennials wear RIBBONS and play DICE and SMOKE and DRINK STUFF FROM SNAKE FLAGONS. Damn 1600s hipsters. It was better when I was your age. 

Humanity, never change.

Look! Silvermarmoset posted an editorial cartoon from the 1600s, providing more proof that no matter what century you were born into you always just missed the good old days.

Reblogging this, it’s amazing.

Early 20th century British conservative cartoonist WK Haselden ran a whole series like this in 1920, where “Maud of the Eighties” (1880s, that is; sturdy, Victorian times) was faced with modern mores generally or “Gladys of Today” specifically:

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I’m sure this was a hilarious, cutting insight at the time:

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By the way, Haselden himself was all of eight years old in 1880. “Born in the wrong time,” I suppose they say.

It’s hard to say how much outright disapproval Haselden was expressing when you read, for example, the below – but as I have pointed out before, things like this that read to us today as awesome were usually intended to be read as unseemly and absurd at the time.

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This is a more overt example of the same sentiment:

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And before giving him too much credit, I hasten to add he was a staunch anti-suffragist:

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Haselden did at least seem to recognize the ironies implicit in “good ol’ days” talk:

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Whatever his level of self-awareness, he seems to have reached the conclusion that the chattering class will always be thus:

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Indeed, in 1921 he anticipated this entire post!

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There is a chance I originally reblogged this partially in the hope David would make amazing hay of it and I WAS NOT DISAPPOINTED