Tumgik
#Chicer
god7stims · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
↳ teujax stimboard w/ cat stims ...
☆ ☆ ☆ | ★ ☆ ★ | ☆ ☆ ☆ . psd
8 notes · View notes
ur-mag · 5 months
Text
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes | In Trend Today
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text or Full Article on MAG NEWS
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
alpha-mag-media · 5 months
Text
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes | In Trend Today
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text or Full Article on MAG NEWS
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
voux-mag · 7 months
Text
12 Autumn Outfits That Look Chicer With Flat Shoes | October 02, 2023 at 07:26AM
12 Autumn Outfits That Look Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text With Ad or Continue reading Untitled
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
mareyshelley · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
“Even though the styles of her dresses are the same as earlier, she looks way chicer. That was fun, to show the progression of her growing younger. Her colours are lighter in the beginning, and go darker. In the end, she and Father Paul look like they belong together.” – Midnight Mass: The Art of Horror.
2K notes · View notes
moni-logues · 10 months
Text
Kintsugi 4
Tumblr media
Pairing: Yoongi x reader
Genre: strangers-to-friends-to-lovers, non-idol!au, angst, smut, tiny bit of eventual fluff
Summary: In a fit of spiteful, post-break-up self-improvement, you sign up to a baking class. Yoongi, in a bid to appease his demanding girlfriend, signs up, too. Determined to make him your friend, you end up with more than you ever imagined.
Word count: 8.1k
Content: none! there is no content lmaooo nah there is just none that needs to be warned for, I don't think, so enjoy freely!!!!!
A/N: I know, I know, it's taken an age but here we are!! And I'm honestly kind of nervous to see how people react!!!! huge thank you to my betas @blog-name-idk @amethystwritesbts and @here2bbtstrash
Chapter Three | Masterlist | Chapter Five
Chapter Four – Someone Old, Someone New 
The message came in shortly after lunch. 
Mei.97: hey girl! Long time no see!!! I’m going to be in Seoul this week, pleeeeaaasse tell me you’re free for dinner tomorrow?!!? It’s been too long!!! Xxx 
You had to read the message twice to be sure you were reading it right. You hadn’t heard from Mei—an old university friend—since your first ‘breakdown’. You wondered what on earth she could want. But you weren’t in any position to be turning down an outreached hand. 
You: sure! It would be great to see you! 
A few months ago, that would have been a huge lie. Now, it was only a little one. You weren’t looking forward to having to smooth over the details of your breakdown, or your break-up, but you had been close as students and it would be easier with her—she moved back to Busan after graduating, so you could put a little bit of the blame for your losing contact on that, too. You knew you weren’t quite there yet, but you felt like you were healing, you were making progress; you sometimes even felt, on occasion, pretty good about life. And you wanted to share that.  
Tumblr media
The first thing you heard upon walking into the bar you had suggested was the loud screech of your name. Then Mei was running over. You had barely even noticed her before she was wrapping her long arms around you in a huge hug. Her hair was as long and silky as it had ever been; she was still wearing the same perfume she always used to wear, and too much of it, as she always had; she looked almost exactly the same, except a little richer, a little chicer, like someone who had truly settled into themselves. She outshone the whole restaurant and looked as if she didn’t notice, as she always used to. The real world didn’t seem to have dimmed any of her at all. You were pleased with yourself that this didn’t make you completely sick with envy. 
“Girl, oh my god, it is so good to see you! You look amazing! I can’t believe it; you’ve barely changed! Love the hair, though,” she announced to basically the whole bar. 
You’d forgotten that she was possibly the only person in the world who was louder and talked more than you did. You’d forgotten how much you liked her. You had no need to be nervous, you realised, because it would never occur to her to judge someone; she just wasn’t that sort of person because she wouldn’t even have the time for it. She was more than just a rolling stone: this rolling stone had an engine and jet fuel. 
“I ordered a bottle of wine because I wasn’t sure if you were still into the same drinks and I figured, wine is a safe option, right? You want some?” she asked but she was already pouring into your glass. “Tell me everything, babe. It has been so long. What is up?” 
You took a deep breath. Where to start? 
You marvelled at how painless the night had been. It was fun. Somehow, despite all the discussion you’d had about your life since university, your life now, it wasn’t painful. Not really. Mei was single, too, and courting every man in Busan before her parents tightened the screws on her to settle down. She was enjoying working for the family business (if a corporation can be called merely a ‘business’). She was earning a salary that made you wince and made her promise dinner was on her. You were doing reasonably well in your career, too, actually. You were earning enough to live in Seoul on your own. Things weren’t perfect, but Mei was such a positive and enthusiastic steam-roller that she made you feel like you were thriving, not wilting. She was exactly what you needed.  
You were just wishing that she didn’t have to leave Seoul, that she could move and stay forever when she took her ice-cream spoon from her mouth and looked sheepishly at her empty bowl. 
“I have a confession to make,” she began. “I had a teeny ulterior motive for asking you to dinner.” 
Your stomach lurched. 
“Oh?” 
“You remember my cousin Sungbin? He came to visit that time at uni?” 
“The one we had to carry back to your room?” 
“You mean the one we had to find someone else to carry back to my room?” 
“Yes!” You laughed. “Yes, I remember! How could I forget?” 
He was a sweet, tall drink of water who accepted every shot and drink foisted on him by his cousin and her friends until he passed out in the bar. You and Mei had dragged him through the streets of Hongdae asking every passerby if they could help you get him home. You didn’t remember who actually helped or much of the rest of the night, but that arduous 100-meter drag was almost as painful as your hangover had been the following day. 
“What about him?” 
“Ok, so my uncle is retiring, right? He’s still going to be on the board but he’s retiring from his actual position so, of course, Sungbin, oldest son, he’s got to step up. He's moving to the big city, girl! Taking up a position at the HQ here. My ulterior motive is me asking you a huge favour.” 
“What’s the favour?” 
“He doesn’t know anyone here, right? Never lived here before. Would you maybe like, take him out for drinks or lunch or something – super casual, no big deal! – just so he’s got a friendly face? Give him some recommendations for stuff, I don’t know, just so he doesn’t feel overwhelmed and on his own?” 
You didn’t really know how to feel about it. Of course, you would. Of course, you would be happy to take Sungbin out, show him around, help him if he needed. You felt flattered that Mei would even ask you, that she thought you would be up to the job. That she thought of you at all, to be honest. Had you not just been thinking that you needed new friends? And now one was landing straight in your lap.  
It all felt a little too good to be true. It was too easy. Things had been too easy recently; this was just too much good, surely? You weren’t used to this. It felt wrong. Made you anxious. And, usually, that anxiety made you make things worse all on your own. But your therapist had told you to stop looking for the bad, to trust the good, appreciate its presence. You could do that. Right? You could do that. 
“Yeah, sure! Of course, I can take him out.” 
Mei dramatically fell to the table in relief and held tight to both your arms. 
“You are an angel! Thank you! Here’s the bad part, though: any chance you can do it tomorrow? I’m leaving in the morning and he’s going to be on his own for the first time since moving-” 
“Oh, he’s already here?” 
“Yeah! That’s why I’m here, girly! I helped him move! Any chance you’re free tomorrow?” 
You didn’t know how to say yes without letting her know that you were the sort of person who had no plans at the weekend but you didn’t want to say no because you were the sort of person who had no plans, and it would be nice to get out of the apartment. You did not look into the fact that she was asking you this last-minute, assuming you would have no plans already. You shrugged. 
“Yeah, I can do drinks or something tomorrow night?” 
“Babe, you are my favourite person in this whole world. I’m going to give you his number; just text him. He doesn’t know anyone here so he literally has nothing better to do and I’ve already told him I’d put you guys in touch.” 
From anyone else, that might have prickled a little; the assumptions might have rubbed you the wrong way, but Mei was relentlessly optimistic, having never had any real hardship in her life (she would admit to this, too), so she had never had any reason to believe that things wouldn’t go the way she expected. Far from wanting to burst her bubble, you wanted to protect her naivety. Because you wished you could have it, too.  
As you walked and subwayed and walked home, you thought about Mei and her life, and your life, and how different things could be. You wondered who you would be if you weren’t so broken, if your head could just have got its shit together—rather, if your head had never gone to shit in the first place. Would you have been like Mei? Would life have found another way to break you? Were things destined or was everyone, including the universe, just making things up as they went along?  
Could you ever be like Mei? Was anyone like her? Did she have secret pain?  
It wasn’t lost on you, the possibility that she wasn’t as happy-go-lucky as she seemed. The shock and surprise of everyone you knew when you ended up in hospital was almost the worst part. If you never heard someone say ‘I had no idea!’ again, it would be too soon. You thought about it a lot, how normal you were (or weren’t). You couldn’t believe that everyone else went through life not thinking the things you thought, that everyone else was somehow just able to get on with things without the sometimes-debilitating urge to sink into the floor forever. 
You shook your head, because you knew you weren’t supposed to be thinking like this. You’d had a really fun time with an old friend and you were going to have a really fun time tomorrow with a new friend. That was all. There was no need to ruin it by overthinking and second-guessing.  
Tumblr media
You tapped a finger nervously on the bar as you sat on your stool. You used to come here a lot, or at least semi-frequently, but you hadn’t ventured into this part of the city since you moved out of the apartment you had shared with your ex. He got the apartment, so he got the neighbourhood, too.  
You couldn’t really miss it, not on its own, because your life had changed dramatically after the break-up: you moved somewhere else, lost most of your friends, and stopped going out. This was really the only ‘out’ that you knew. And, crucially, it was close enough to Sungbin to become his neighbourhood, too. So here you were, tapping at the bar, staring at the door, trying not to gulp your drink and be drunk before he even arrived.  
It was bright and hot and humid. It had rained solidly for three days and the water still hung in the air, clung to your skin, even as the sun tried its best to burn it away. You pressed your palm against your cold glass and tried to will yourself cooler without success. You already felt sticky with sweat and you didn’t know if that was entirely down to the weather, or if your nerves were also to blame.  
You knew you didn’t have to be so nervous. What was the worst that could happen? Taehyung had, very patiently, talked you through it: all possible outcomes, all likely scenarios, best- and worst-case situations; he had reminded you that you were an adult human being who knew how to speak to other people. You did. You did know. But it had been a very long time since you had been in this situation. It wasn’t a date. Obviously, it wasn’t a date, but it was the closest you had got to one for many years; you were meeting a man, in a bar, alone. You didn’t know each other; you were hoping he would like you.  
You took another gulp of your drink and repeated Taehyung’s words back to yourself. You reminded yourself of how good things were, ran through your gratitude list, tried to persuade yourself not to psych yourself out before the date (it was not a date! NOT. A. DATE.) had even begun. 
You had turned from the door, realising how awkward it might be for you to have to stare at each other as he walked towards you and were now just glancing over your shoulder every single time you heard the door open. To stop it being awkward. You had done well to pace yourself and it was as you lifted your glass to your lips for another sip that you heard someone call your name. You turned and came face to face with a man you knew could not be Sungbin. 
“Hi,” he said somewhat awkwardly as you continued to drink. “I don’t know if you remember me but I’m Mei’s cousin, Sungbin.” 
You gasped as you drank and it all came out in a choke and a splutter and you were blushing and fumbling to put your glass down, find a napkin, rewind time by ten seconds. The napkin came from his hand and you took your time drying your face and hands to try to will your blushes away. You were so embarrassed you could barely look at him.  
And there was so much of him to look at. This was not tiny, tall drink of water Sungbin from your university days. He was huge. He must have grown at least six inches taller, not to mention wider. His biceps were the size of thighs and his thighs were almost bursting out of his skinny jeans. You didn’t know where to look. 
“You can’t be Sungbin!” you cried. “You’ve got to be the guy that ate him!” 
He laughed and tugged at his hair a little self-consciously. 
“Yeah, I guess I’ve grown a bit.” 
“A bit!  You’re... You’re a hulk!”  
You were off your stool and gripping his bicep before he’d even finished the sentence—your fingertips didn’t even come close to touching. You were gawking, gaping, ogling this poor man without an attempt to hide it. You gestured broadly to his entire body with your other hand and only when you looked back up did you notice the blush on his face, the awkward way he averted his gaze. You stood back and gasped again, this time without choking. 
“I’m so sorry,” you told him. “Oh my god, that was so rude of me. I’m so sorry! What a dickhead! This is a terrible first impression for me to be making!” 
“Technically, not a first impression; we have met before.” He chuckled awkwardly. “And I didn’t exactly cover myself in glory then; I was, uh, a little worse for wear, I think.” 
“A little?! We were worse for wear; you were... the worst for wear! I’m amazed you survived.” 
“The joys of youth. Not sure I’d survive doing it now, just in case you had any ideas.” 
“Mei and I could barely get you home then, there is no way on God’s green earth I’d be able to carry you home by myself now! I wouldn’t risk it.” 
“So, we’re agreed then: both getting home in one piece?” 
You lifted your glass. 
“I’ll drink to that!”  
*  
You moved from one bar to the next, almost retracing steps you used to take in what felt like your former life. Sungbin paid great attention to where you were going and what else was around, cataloguing his new area, making notes for his new life. Your nerves were long gone, as were his, and you were enjoying a night out with a relative stranger as if you were a real person who did things like this: a real person who made new friends, who went out at the weekend, who had a proper life again. You had to pinch yourself to make sure this was all really happening, that this was all really going well. Your problems felt miles away, lightyears. You wondered if this is what it felt like to be normal. Whole. Fixed. You made a mental note to tell your therapist. 
You were on a roof terrace, carpeted with fake grass, decorated with fake flowers. Everything was clean and bright and the sun was still high in the summer sky. It was still a little too warm and a little too sticky, your glasses sweating as well as your bodies, but the lightest of breezes lifted the ends of your hair every now and then, and you couldn’t have imagined a more comfortable feeling than the soft rush of wind across your hot skin. You took seats under a white, wooden pergola where the sunlight was dappled through the fronds twisted along the frame.  
This heat usually enervated you, made you lethargic and sloth-like. That night, though, sitting under fake foliage, you felt solar-powered. There was a summer spring in your step. You felt, dare you believe it, like you were glowing. Like a butterfly emerging from its cocoon. A brand new thing. A better thing. Being here, an old place, with Sungbin, a new friend, could have felt awkward, uncomfortable, like trying to fit a square peg in a round hole—you had expected it to—but no. You felt bigger and brighter, not smaller and duller. You were conscious of the possibility of your old life encroaching on your new one, the possibility of running into someone you used to know, but you decided to push those thoughts away. Compartmentalise them. Ignore them. You didn’t need them.  
Sungbin was talking about his ex. It was an awkward break-up; they’d not been together long enough for her to move to Seoul with him, or for him to even ask her to, but it had been long enough that it felt significant, felt like throwing something away when they ended things. But he was young and he wasn’t worried. You didn’t say it out loud but you thought to yourself that a man like him surely would never have to worry: looking like he did, having the position he had, being a sweet, polite kind of guy; women would be queueing up for even a chance with him.  
“I don’t really miss her that much, because there’s so much going on here that I haven’t really even had the time to. That, if nothing else, tells me it was the right decision for us.” 
The words reached your ears but didn’t go in. You could feel your heart pounding hard in your chest and sweat begin to prick in your palms. Your eyes had flicked over the crowd in front of you, people walking in and out, to and from the bar, looking for tables, looking for friends. They had skimmed over the faces of strangers until they hit upon someone familiar. The face had immediately disappeared back into the crowd, but you were sure it was him. It had to be. Why else would your whole body have gone into panic mode? Why else would your legs be like jelly? Why else would your fingers feel numb? A quiet ringing grew louder in your ears and you kept looking for him again, waiting for that dark head above a white shirt to break through the crowd again. You had to be sure it was him. 
“Are you ok?” 
You wanted to stand. You had to stand and get a better view. You wished it weren’t so busy. Why did it have to be a Saturday night? Why were all these people out?  
“Are you ok?” 
A touch on your arm drew you back and your head span to Sungbin. He looked confused, concerned. 
“I think I saw my ex,” you told him, your voice hoarse.  
“Ah. A bad break-up?” 
Your eyes had already gone back to the crowd, scanning and searching.  
FUCK. 
It was him. It really was him. It had to be. It couldn’t be.  
“Yeah, no, I don’t know,” you answered vaguely. 
You were still staring at him and then his eyes flicked to yours and you flinched so hard you almost knocked over your glass. You turned away, turned back; he looked as surprised as you were. He looked unsure. He looked like he was walking over to you. 
“Oh fuck, oh fuck, oh fuck,” you said under your breath, looking at the table, trying to work out how on earth you were going to handle this. You wondered, if you thought hard enough, if you would be able to make yourself disappear. You wondered if you could just run: leg it out of the bar as fast as you could and not look back. You felt dizzy. You felt sick. You felt... drunk. Too drunk. Of all the places and all the times you might have imagined seeing him again, this wasn’t one. This would probably be the very last place you’d have chosen to run into him.  
Sungbin’s hand was back on your arm, less tentative now. He scooted his chair closer to yours. His hand slid down your wrist and he tangled his fingers in yours. You could only look at him; you didn’t have the mental capacity to even form the question in your mind. 
“Don’t worry,” came his reply. “I got you.”  
Then he winked.  
“Hi.” 
You looked up and there he was. San. Just as he always had been. Maybe his hair was a little shorter, you could kid yourself there was an extra line or two on his face. But it was him, no denying. 
“Hi,” you squeaked back. 
You were trying to think of all the things you wanted to say to him, trying to think of all the things you could say to him, that would be appropriate to say to him here, in this bar, whilst holding the hand of another man. 
“Hi, I’m Sungbin.”  
He was confident. He stuck out his free hand and gave San a generous smile. 
“Oh, uh, San.” 
“Nice to meet you.” 
“Nice to meet you, too.” San turned his face back to you. “How have you been?” 
You looked at Sungbin for help: this relative stranger, this potential new friend pretending to be your new boyfriend in front of your old boyfriend, this man who seemed to have much better control of this situation than you did. You could barely think at all. It was a desperate ringing, alarm bells, sirens wailing, a maelstrom of panic. Sungbin smiled at you. You had no idea how long you looked at him before answering, had no sense of time anymore. 
“Yeah, fine,” you said, eventually tearing your gaze from Sungbin to stare into San and the sun behind him. Sungbin gave your hand a squeeze. “Good, actually. You?” 
“Yeah, same old same old, you know how things are. Didn’t expect to see you here.” 
“Oh, that’s my fault.” Sungbin stepping in to save you again. “I live in the area so I’m always dragging her over this way.”  
You stammered for a second, trying to take in San’s surprise and Sungbin’s sweet, encouraging smile. 
“Y-yeah, he does,” you confirmed. “I don’t- I don’t mind, though, really.” 
“Mm, you always liked this bar. I remember.”  
“Yeah.” 
You noticed the way San’s eyes flicked to your hands, clasped together on the table, not just once but again and again. You wished you could peer inside his head, know what he was thinking.  
You were hardly thinking at all. Your brain was trying so hard to be quick that it had overloaded itself, stalled, got stuck. You couldn’t get over the fact of him, there, in front of you. It had been months. Seasons had changed since you saw him last. You had changed. Could he see that? Did you want him to? Did you want him to miss you? Did you want him to be bothered by Sungbin—gentle giant, Sungbin, holding your hand so casually, talking about you as if you really were together? You tried not to imagine what San was doing there, who he was with. You didn’t know if you would care. You wouldn’t be surprised to learn he was dating. He was a catch, you knew that.  
There were too many things happening at once, too many things to process. You felt like you were spinning out of control. What if San knew Sungbin wasn’t your boyfriend? What if he knew this was all pretend? What if he asked more about it? What if everything unravelled before your very eyes and the ground didn’t show mercy and swallow you whole? 
“Are you still living around here?” San asked you. “I would’ve expected to see you around more.” 
“Oh, uh, no. I’m over the river. I just-…"  
You couldn’t commit yourself to the lie, had to let yourself trail off just looking at Sungbin, desperate for a sign you were doing ok, you were playing this the right way. He grinned at you. 
“Like I said, my fault.”  
He shrugged with a light chuckle and San faintly followed suit, mouth moving but no sound actually coming out. 
“Right, well,” he began in the tell-tale way that said he was backing out of this conversation. “I’d better get back to my table. It was uh, nice meeting you, Sungbin. Good to see you, too-” his eyes rested on you, needled into you like he was searching for something specific in your face. “I’m glad you’re doing well.” 
“Yeah, me too. I mean, me for you, you know what I mean.” 
A genuine smile. And a nod. Then he was retreating back into the sea of people, disappearing and leaving no trace. No trace but the hammering of your heart. No trace but the sweat pooling in your palms and sticking your dress to your back. No trace but the sudden exhaustion of the relief you felt being out of his presence. Sungbin squeezed your hand again. 
“Bad break-up?” 
You rested your forehead on the fingers of your free hand and shook your head. 
“It was for me. It was the right decision but yeah, it was bad for me. I haven’t... I haven’t seen him since I moved the last of my shit out from our apartment – what used to be our apartment.” 
Sungbin nodded knowingly and placed his hand on top of yours just for a second. Then he let you go completely. 
“I’m sorry if I overstepped. I realise I didn’t really give you a chance to disagree; I’m sorry about that. I-” 
You shook your head and waved your hand.  
“It’s absolutely fine,” you reassured him. “It was good, actually.”  
You were deeply grateful for his quick-thinking, presumptuous though it may have been. You wanted to splash your face with cold water, give yourself a shock, try to bring yourself back into the room. You didn’t want to look like you were still completely hung up on your ex; you didn’t want to look like a mess; you just needed a second to take a breath. 
“That was... not expected,” you went on, more for your benefit than for his. “I have thought so many times about what I would say and what I would do if I saw him again but I guess I never really believed it would happen and then suddenly, he was fucking right in front of me and I just felt like dying!” 
Sungbin laughed, as you knew he would, because it was a joke. It was a joke. But you didn’t not feel like dying for at least a second there.  
“When did you break up?” 
“Oh, months ago now. Kind of feels like I should be over it, I guess. I mean, I am, really. I just-...” 
“You were caught off-guard. I get it; it’s rough seeing them again.”  
It was rough. And you believed that he did get it. And he smiled at you so sincerely that you could have cried. It surprised you, that people could be nice to you; that people could like you, even; that people could see you and still smile at you. You looked at each other a little longer, Sungbin’s quiet calm radiating through you, your heartrate slowing and your spinning head coming to a stop. 
“Thank you,” you said as you picked up your glass to take a sip to cover awkwardness that only you felt. “That was quick thinking and um, yeah, I think it helped. You didn’t have to do that.” 
Sungbin shrugged.  
“You’re doing me a big favour tonight; it was the least I could do. Happy to be your fake boyfriend whenever you need!”  
He laughed and then you laughed and it felt good. You drained the last of your drink and Sungbin suggested you go somewhere else for your next one. You agreed. You didn’t look for San on your way out, just kept your eyes on Sungbin’s back as he led you, your hand in his (just in case), back through the bar and out onto the street. 
“You don’t have to literally walk me to my door,” Sungbin said as you stepped into the lift with him. “I maintain that it should be me walking you home.” 
You shrugged. 
“That argument might hold water if you had even half a clue of how to get to my apartment. But you don’t. Besides, I was taking you out tonight; it only follows that I walk you back, too. Why break tradition?” 
Sungbin bit back a grin. 
“How long before I live that down?” 
“Oh, at least five more years.” 
“Well, if you’re going to make me suffer that, don’t you think we should do this correctly? Now, how did it go again?” 
He moved behind you and draped himself over your shoulders, slowly leaning his weight onto you. You cried out and could do nothing but collapse underneath him. 
“NO! I couldn’t carry you then; now you’re just trying to kill me!” 
You knelt on the floor of the lift with your hands outstretched above you, as if they would in any way hold him off. He straightened and pulled you up by them. 
“Fine,” he conceded as he stepped out at his floor. “But next time, you’re going to have to let me walk you home. Deal?” 
You shrugged. You nodded. You didn’t take that as a promise.  
“About your ex,” Sungbin started, standing in front of his door. 
“Yeah?” 
“Where exactly are you at with that?” 
That had you on the backfoot. You didn’t know how to answer the question for yourself, let alone for him. Your first thought was that you probably would have to ask your therapist; did she think you were over it? Would she think you had closure? You blinked and opened your mouth as if somehow an answer would fall out of it without your having to compile it first.  
“I just mean,” he continued, “are you dating? Would it be alright if I asked you out?” 
“Oh, uh, I-”  
Would it be alright? Wouldn’t it be? You had told yourself you were off dating. You weren’t ready for it; you had been emphatic when you’d said as much to Yoongi only a few weeks ago. Was that still true? You had spent so much time that day reminding yourself that this wasn’t a date, but... what if it had been? San aside, it had gone well, hadn’t it? You had had fun; Sungbin seemed like he had, too. He was the one who pretended to be your boyfriend first. Maybe... Maybe it would be ok? Maybe you were ready? There was only one way to really find out.  
“Yeah, I guess that would be fine.” 
He smiled. 
“Good. I’ll do that then.”  
He took your hand in his and pressed a kiss to your knuckles; everything inside you fluttered. Then he winked and dropped your hand to enter his door code. 
“Text me when you get home safe, yeah?”  
You nodded, mute. He smiled at you again. 
“It was really nice to see you again.” And when he said your name, it sounded new.  
You didn’t leave immediately. Couldn’t. You stood outside his apartment, in shock, processing, looking at his closed front door, to the left, to the right, looking for an answer to what just happened. Sungbin did not just ask you out. But he did say he would. He was going to ask you out.  
And you had already kind of said yes.  
To a date. 
You fumbled in your bag for your phone and had it to your ear before you realised you absolutely had to leave, lest Sungbin hear you speaking. You scuttled back down the hallway and into the lift while Taehyung’s phone rang and rang and eventually went to voicemail. You hung up and tried again. And then again. And then you sent him a text. 
You: TEDDY!!! PICK UPP!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 
You tried calling for a fourth time and for a fourth time, you heard the automated voice of his voicemail service.  
You threw your phone back into your bag, defeated, but jittery with nerves and adrenaline. You could barely remember how this felt. In fact, with San you had seen it coming. You had engineered it. You had been flirting for weeks; you practically demanded he ask you out. Then he did. This had come out of the blue. Blindsided you. For the second time that evening. You were so shocked by Sungbin’s question that you had, momentarily, forgotten about running into San.  
What a fucking night. One that you had almost no idea how or where to start processing. Everything was-… you threw your hands in the air, by yourself, in the lift, shaking your head, completely bewildered. Taehyung was your go-to person for this. He was your sounding board. You picked up your phone to call him just one more time.  
Your phone rang as you were changing into your pyjamas and you picked it up with your vest only half pulled down over your chest. 
“Teddy! Finally!” 
“Are you dying?” 
“No.” 
“Are you hurt or injured or maimed in any way?” 
“No.” 
“Then stop calling!” 
“Hey! I need to talk to you!” 
“Well, it’s going to have to wait, princess; I’m busy.” 
“Not even for five minutes?” 
“No.” 
“But I saw San!” 
There was a pause as Taehyung digested the information. 
“Are you ok?” he asked simply. 
“Yeah.” 
“Then it’s going to have to wait until tomorrow.” 
You heard a rustling in the background, another voice. 
“Oh my god,” you gasped, turning your voice down to a loud stage whisper. “Are you with someone?” 
“... Yes.” 
“OH MY GOD! Oh my god, please tell me it’s the barista. Is it the barista? It is, right?!” 
“... Yes.” 
You squealed and fell onto your sofa to kick your feet in the air. 
“WE HAVE SO MUCH TO TALK ABOUT!” you screamed down the phone. 
“Yes, but tomorrow.” 
“Yeah, fine, tomorrow. Oh my god. I am SO excited, Teddybear.” 
“Yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever. I’ll talk to you later. I’m going now.” 
“Bye, Teddy!” 
“Good night, babe; love you.” 
“Love you!” 
It was entirely possible that you weren’t going to be able to sleep at all now.  
Tumblr media
You squealed as you opened your door and let Taehyung into your apartment. He handed over an ice-cold, sweating cup of coffee and flopped onto your sofa.  
“Tell me literally everything,” you demanded. 
He merely shrugged. 
“Don’t be fucking coy, you piece of shit! I want to know everything! It’s THE BARISTA.” 
The barista worked at a coffee shop not far from Taehyung’s apartment. The barista was a fine, delicate-boned, ethereal beauty, probably the prettiest person you had ever seen in real life. Even Taehyung—unflappable, cool, calm and collected Taehyung—had been flustered the first time the barista had flashed him his pearly whites. And, last night, something had finally happened between them.  
“There’s really not that much to tell,” Taehyung countered. “I asked him out and he said yes.” 
You hit him hard with a cushion. 
“I said I want to know everything! And you can’t just say it like it was that simple; you’ve been daydreaming about that guy for months!” 
“Firstly, I was sussing out his situation. I understand tact and diplomacy and how to not say every stupid thing that’s in my head at any given moment-” 
“Uncalled for, but go on.” 
“-So I had to bide my time.-” 
“Also, you’re a massive chicken and he made you go knock-kneed and goo-goo-eyed.” 
“-Do you want me to tell you what happened? Or would you prefer to just make up your own version?” 
You cackled. 
“You know I’d love to make up my own story, but no, sorry, I’ll stop interrup-” 
“Don’t make promises you can’t keep, babygir-” 
“Ok, now who’s interrupting?!” 
“I’m the one trying to tell you a story!” 
“Ok! Ok! Fine, spin your yarn and give me the entire confection, please.” 
“I’m seeing him again tonight. Truth be told, I’d be with him right now if someone hadn’t already laid claim to my time.” 
“Teddy!”  
You felt bad for tearing him away from his One True Love, you did. But he’d already seen his success with the barista (Hyunjin to those in the know) and could go running right back to him as soon as he was done here. All you had was a too-warm apartment to stew in until whatever hour or day Sungbin would choose to actually, officially do the asking.  
“Come on, then,” Taehyung said, with a shrug, and nudged you with his foot. “How the fuck did you see San again?” 
Shit, that too.  
“Right, well, you know I was out with Sungbin last night—and, by the way, do NOT let me forget to show you his instagram. Oh my god. There are no words. And there’s also something else I need to tell you about him after this. But, yes, San, ok.” 
It felt like trying to describe a blur. You still didn’t know how you felt about it. The whole night felt surreal to you now, like a dream. It was frustrating to have met him but not really met him, to have seen him and not been able to talk. Everything that you had been working through—trying to work through—felt bundled up inside you and you wanted him to know. You didn’t need him to think you were dating again, you didn’t need to ‘win’; you needed him to know that you understood. That maybe there would always be some kind of thing between you—history, old intimacies like ink stains in your skin—but it didn’t mean that that past would hold you back forever. You wanted him to see that you understood that. 
But you came to those conclusions this morning, after a deep sleep, after another man had made implicit promises to ask you out. And, once he’d actually asked you, would anything you had to say to San matter anymore? Did it really matter now?  
“I don’t know how I feel about it because... I had this blind panic, y’know? But I don’t know why I panicked because San is a good person and I understand why he broke up with me and I don’t blame him for that and there really shouldn’t have been any reason for it to be awkward, right?” 
“I mean, another man pretending to be your boyfriend might make it a little awkward.” 
“Maybe... But that’s not Sungbin’s fault; he was trying to help. I thought I’d be cool seeing him again, because I’ve thought so much about things I want to say to him or would say if I could, but when he was actually in front of me, it was like I couldn’t think at all. I don’t know what that means.” 
“It doesn’t have to mean anything. You were surprised.” 
“Yeah, but shouldn’t I be over him? Should he have that effect on me even now?” 
“I don’t think ‘should’ is a helpful word here, sugarplum. There is no should or shouldn’t about feelings; isn’t that therapy 101?” 
“I just don’t know... I guess I thought that seeing him again would make everything crystal clear, written in stone. Sure. But... Well—ok, the other thing is that Sungbin kind of asked me out.” 
“On a date?” 
“Yeah.” 
“What did you say?” 
“Well, he asked me if it would be alright if he asked me out. And I said yes. So he said he would. But he hasn’t actually asked me yet.” 
“And you want to know if you should go out with him or not?” 
“I guess?”  
You shrugged. You wanted to go out with Sungbin. You knew you wanted to because you could picture his smiling face and bulging biceps and you saw clearly, outside of the moment, how quickly and easily he stepped in to support you, no questions asked and no favours owed. He wanted to date you. You knew you wanted to date him. But- 
“I don’t want it to be a mistake,” you said.  
“That’s natural. No one likes making mistakes.” 
“No, I mean, I don’t want it to be a mistake for Sungbin.” 
“Why would it be?” 
You looked at him, trying to say, without saying, what you meant. Because it had been for San—you had been. He was better off without you and maybe Sungbin would be, too. He was young and rich and free; he had just moved to the biggest city in the country; he had the world at his feet. Were you really going to let him limit himself, stop himself at your door?  
Taehyung looked cross for a moment, lips pursed and eyebrows drawn, then he took a sip of his coffee (mostly iced water at this point) and, when he turned back to you, his gaze was softer.  
“Baby,” he cooed and he held his arms out to you. Despite the heat in your poorly air-conditioned apartment, you climbed into his lap and let him stroke your hair. “There’s only one way to know for sure if something’s a mistake and that’s to do it. Sungbin clearly wants to. If you also want to, then you’re just going to have to dive in. The water’s great.” 
You nodded and let him hold you, so grateful to him and all his tact and diplomacy and gentleness. He wasn’t always—or often—gentle with you, because usually that’s not what you needed and he knew it. Just like he knew that today, that was what you needed. 
“I do have one question, though,” he said and his hesitance made your stomach drop. 
“Ok.” 
“Where does Yoongi fit in with all of this?” 
“What do you mean?” 
“Well, I don’t know; I thought you guys were-” 
“-Friends! Just friends! Have I not said it a million times?! We’re just friends! We’ve always just been friends!” 
“But you did have sex-” 
“ONE TIME!” 
You pushed away from him to better display your indignation and displeasure. Taehyung had a bee in his bonnet about Yoongi—had done since you’d first mentioned him—even though he didn’t know the guy, didn’t know anything. 
“Ok, ok!” He held his hands up in defeat. “I just sort of figured you guys were heading in that direction.” 
“Why?” 
“You seem to like him a lot.” 
“I do. Because we’re friends. I like you a lot, too, and we’re not going to shack up.” 
“Yes, love, but I’m gay and you are not a man.” 
You pushed him. 
“You know what I mean!” 
“I take your point. If you want to date Sungbin and feel good about it, then you have my blessing-” 
“I don’t need your blessing, Teddy; I can do what I like!” 
He fixed his eyes on you and simply waited you out. 
“Ok, fine!” you cried, exasperated, after probably not more than five seconds. “Thank you, yes, I did want your approval.” 
“And you have it, my sweet. As long as you’re happy and not being a complete idiot, I’m on board.” 
“I mean... Thanks, I guess?” 
"Don’t mention it.” 
Tumblr media
“Babe!” you cried as soon as Yoongi step foot inside the classroom the following Thursday. You beckoned him closer, telling him to hurry, and grabbed him by the arm as soon as he was within reach. “I have so much to tell you.” 
He looked surprised, blinked, and then shrugged with a slight nod of his head. You didn’t pause for thought as you unloaded both your bags and your gossip onto the counter. You were sieving flour as you told him about your dinner with Mei; beating eggs into the mixture when you told him about drinks with Sungbin; and watching Yoongi almost drop the entire thing as he placed it in the oven when you mentioned San. 
“What was that like?” he asked with genuine, but guarded, curiosity.  
“A blur. Kind of a panicked mess but also fine. I sort of want a do-over but mostly for my pride, y’know? It was bumping into an ex, not actually meeting up with them so I think that made it better. But also worse because I had no time to prepare but there was also no opportunity to get into the difficult stuff which meant we didn’t have to get into it.” 
“Do you still want to do that? Talk to him?” 
“There’s a lot I want to say to him, but they are things I want to say more than things I think he would need or want to hear. If we met, it would be for my benefit and I don’t know if he deserves to be pulled in for that. Do you know what I mean?” 
He looked thoughtful for a moment and nodded.  
“And that was before Sungbin asked me out, too, so maybe I would be saying something different if that hadn’t happened.” 
“He asked you out?” 
Yoongi was turning towards his counter, looking at his sugar in his pan, turning on the hob, his head inclined just slightly towards you to indicate that he was listening. He needlessly pushed a hand through his hair which, far from tucking it behind his ear, made it fall in front of his face. You were, likewise, distracted by your sugar syrup and altogether too excited to take note of much else. 
“Yes!” you cried in answer. “So, on the Saturday he asked if he could and, obviously, I said yes. Then it took him until Wednesday to actually do the damn thing, but yes, he asked me out and I said yes and we’re going out tomorrow for our first actual date.” 
“Wow.” 
“I know, right? I had no idea it was coming—the bit where he asked if he could ask me out, I mean. We ran into my ex at drinks! And he asked me out?! And I was... I was discombobulated, you might say; I stood at his door for five minutes just in shock at what had happened. I was in disbelief. Especially because I wasn’t expecting it! At all. I mean, I was just doing Mei a favour! I didn’t think anything of it and now I can’t stop thinking about it! Or, well, him. I had forgotten how exciting this part is? It’s terrifying, yeah, completely horrifying, really, but I also just feel like I’m alive, y’know?” 
You paused briefly, glancing at the oven timer and stirring your syrup.  
“I just...” you started and then stopped, staring off into space to let the thought coalesce in your brain. “It’s so crazy that you can think one thing and then someone comes into your life and, suddenly, everything is so different. All it takes is one person to—ok, this is dramatic but you know me now so you’re going to have to let me be—change your whole life. A chance encounter? And suddenly I’m not the world’s loneliest, bitterest, most miserable single person alive? Suddenly, I have something to be excited about? To look forward to? I’m getting ahead of myself, I know I am, but I’m allowing it. I’m allowed to indulge in this because it’s been so long. I’ve been miserable for ages now. And I’m finally not. Don’t get me wrong when I say this, because therapy works, or at least it helps, it really does, but man, having a crush on someone is fucking electric, right? Years of counselling and it turns out nothing makes you feel the joy of being alive like when you really fucking like someone.” 
Yoongi hummed. 
Chapter Three | Masterlist | Chapter Five
204 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Audrey Hepburn with her husband Mel Ferrer in 1958. She is in Rome making The Nun's Story, and he has joined her there for a brief holiday. Audrey, very smart as usual, wears mink on the inside, "so much chicer than on the outside," as she has said.
27 notes · View notes
famousinuniverse · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
Vietnamese Cultural Dress
The Ao Dai and Non La, the 2 most singinficant dresses of Vietnamese Culture 
The cultural dress of Vietnam is called Ao Dai, meaning "long top". It has been a part of Vietnamese culture since 1774, when it was ordered by Vo Vuong and made mandatory to wear by the Nguyen government. The women wear a long tunic which is long-sleeved, has a high neckline and slits cut down to the waist. It is paired with comfortable trousers, usually white or black in colour. Men also wear the same thing, except that their tunic is shorter than that of a woman's and not slitted. The dress is made up of cotton only, keeping in mind the weather conditions of the country. The colour of a woman's ao dai reflected their marital status as well. White colour was worn by young girls, pastel colour dress by unmarried and bright colours by married women. At present times, the colours do not really reflect what a woman's age/marital status is, because they wear any colour of their choice.
Ao dai is often paired with non la, the cultural hats in Vietnam. The cone-shaped hats are made up of palm leaves and provide shelter from both rain and sunlight.
Vietnamese traditional dress: insights and traditions
Vietnam is a country of diversity, with more than 50 ethnic groups and an array of mountainous and urban communities with a whole host of different traditions. The variety of Vietnamese traditional dress is therefore vast, with some prominent and subtle differences in various parts of the country.
Ao Dai
Tumblr media
This is one of the best-known pieces of Vietnamese traditional dress, most commonly worn by women. It consists of a long, fitted silk tunic worn over loose trousers. While young girls often wear white ao dai to reflect their purity, older girls who aren’t yet married tend to wear soft pastel colours. Rich and bright colours are usually worn by married women. The first version of the ao dai dates back to the 1740s, but the look of the ao dai today dates back to the 1930s, when a chicer version of the garment was designed, influenced by the French fashion houses. Men do wear ao dai too, but this is usually reserved for special occasions.
Ao Tu Than
Tumblr media
This four-piece dress was mostly worn by women in the north of Vietnam. It is largely obsolete now, but can still be seen worn at special festivals and events in Vietnam, such as Tet.
Ao Ba Ba
Tumblr media
This two-piece outfit is worn by both men and women. It’s more common in southern Vietnam, particularly around the Mekong Delta, and consists of a long-sleeved, buttoned silk shirt with a scooped neck and high splits from the bottom up on each side, worn with silk trousers.
Ao Gam
Tumblr media
This traditional outfit is worn by Vietnamese men at special occasions. Described as a brocade tunic, the material is thicker than the ao dai and other forms of traditional dress.
Conical Hat
Tumblr media
The conical hat (non la) is a common hat spotted in Vietnam. It originally had a practical use as it helped to keep the rain of peoples’ faces as they worked in rice paddies or in other outdoor jobs. It also helped protect the face from the strong sun. They’re made with natural local materials, usually bamboo, palm leaves or tree bark. The shape of the conical hats means they have even more practical uses than this, also used to carry shopping from the market or as a bowl to drink water from!
Ethnic dress
Tumblr media
Ethnic groups who live in the more remote hills, mountains and lowlands each have their own distinctive style of traditional dress. The origins of the different styles of dress are usually led by practical matters. For example, people who live in lowland regions often live in houses on stilts over the water. They tend to wear more practical trousers, but shirts have symbols inspired by their surroundings, such as forest flowers. People who live in the mountains tend to wear garments that are easy for working in the fields and traversing mountain passes. However, one thing all such traditional costumes have in common are bright colours and genuine creativity in terms of design.
Silk
Tumblr media
Vietnam is a country which produces a huge amount of silk. This tradition is rooted in history – King Ly Thai Tong was encouraging silk production in Vietnam as far back as the year 1,000 – in a drive to further Vietnam’s economic development. Continuing to this day, silk garments can now be found across Vietnam. As well as ao dai made from silk, many people also wear silk shirts and scarves. Interestingly, silk painting is another typical Vietnamese tradition.
Vietnamese traditional dress gives amazing insights into the colourful country of Vietnam. Join us on small group tours to find off-the-beaten track localities and traditions in Vietnam
Vietnamese traditional dress: insights and traditions (mrlinhadventure.com)
13 notes · View notes
phireads · 6 days
Text
Finding decent sewing patterns/ fabrics is so hard because it’s like no I don’t want to look like my grandma, I want to look like my great, great, great grandma and that’s so much chicer
6 notes · View notes
aer0s · 11 months
Note
,,,,,toy,,,,,,,toy chicer,,,,,,
aaaah u cheeky bastard. u got me drawin one of my faves
Tumblr media
48 notes · View notes
velovelo · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
ELLE Editorial: Cycling in Couture
A chicer Tour de France
6 notes · View notes
shcherbatskya · 2 months
Text
i understand anne forever‼️ i have a “shall i learn italian? i think it’d be amusing, if the verbs aren’t too irregular. but then french is a much chicer language. everyone says so. parlez-vous français?” moment at least like two or three times a day…
2 notes · View notes
ur-mag · 5 months
Text
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes | In Trend Today
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text or Full Article on MAG NEWS
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
alpha-mag-media · 5 months
Text
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes | In Trend Today
6 Winter Outfits That Look So Much Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text or Full Article on MAG NEWS
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
voux-mag · 7 months
Text
12 Autumn Outfits That Look Chicer With Flat Shoes | September 30, 2023 at 07:28AM
12 Autumn Outfits That Look Chicer With Flat Shoes Read Full Text With Ad or Continue reading Untitled
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
queenofnabooty · 1 year
Text
New Clothes (read here)
Lyra&Asriel - ft. Lyra&Marisa and slight Asriel/Marisa
He turned back to his daughter. Her little hand was holding the door ajar. The signage above was freshly painted with added flourish on the lettering to make it stand out. The display clothes were smartly arranged and the fabric looked quality. This store was chicer than he remembered. Or maybe it wasn’t, and only now its true nature was revealing itself to him. Well, he wouldn’t turn around now and bartering is a skill he’d cultivated in recent years. 
13 notes · View notes