Boulevard de Strasbourg (Corsets) photographed by Eugène Atget, Paris (1912)

Boulevard de Strasbourg (Corsets) photographed by Eugène Atget, Paris (1912)

Josephine Baker at the Theatre des Champs Elysees, Paris, 1926

Josephine Baker at the Theatre des Champs Elysees, Paris, 1926

updownsmilefrown:

The New York Dolls, Arc de Triomphe, Paris, 1973
by Alain Dister

updownsmilefrown:

The New York Dolls, Arc de Triomphe, Paris, 1973

by Alain Dister

ramirezdahmerbundy:

crystallizedlie:

Le Café de L’Enfer was a Hell-themed café in Paris’ red light district.

posted 1 year ago via cyanyde · © cmfcknw with 10,610 notes

muscavomitoria:

The Catacombs of Paris


Paris has a deeper and stranger connection to its underground than almost any city, and that underground is one of the richest. The arteries and intestines of Paris, the hundreds of miles of tunnels that make up some of the oldest and densest subway and sewer networks in the world, are just the start of it. Under Paris there are spaces of all kinds: canals and reservoirs, crypts and bank vaults, wine cellars transformed into nightclubs and galleries. Most surprising of all are the carrières—the old stone quarries that fan out in a deep and intricate web under many neighborhoods, mostly in the southern part of the metropolis.

These sections of caverns and tunnels have been transformed into underground ossuaries, holding the remains of about 6 million people. Opened in the late 18th century, the underground cemetery became a tourist attraction on a small scale from the early 19th century, and has been open to the public on a regular basis from 1874.

The official name for these subterranean veins is l’Ossuaire Municipal. Although the cemetery portion covers only a small section of underground tunnels comprising “les carrières de Paris”, Parisians today often refer to the entire tunnel network as “The Catacombs.”


Corsets on display in a store on the Boulevard de Strasbourg in Paris, 1912, photographed by Eugène Atget

Corsets on display in a store on the Boulevard de Strasbourg in Paris, 1912, photographed by Eugène Atget

posted 1 year ago with 851 notes
“Cabaret de l’Enfer” (Hell Cabaret) was a popular Paris nightclub in the 1890s

“Cabaret de l’Enfer” (Hell Cabaret) was a popular Paris nightclub in the 1890s

posted 2 years ago with 54 notes
Liane de Pougy at the Folies Bergere Paris 1890’s

Liane de Pougy at the Folies Bergere Paris 1890’s

Le Cafe de L’Enfer was a Hell-themed cafe in Paris’ red light district

Le Cafe de L’Enfer was a Hell-themed cafe in Paris’ red light district

posted 2 years ago with 50 notes
Crazy Horse, Paris dancer 1957

Crazy Horse, Paris dancer 1957

drakecaperton:

La Vie Parisienne
May 15, 1920

drakecaperton:

La Vie Parisienne

May 15, 1920

Unknown model Paris circa 1930

Unknown model Paris circa 1930

thewicked-eternity