Stay Tuned For More items Of The #NSale We Will Pick Out By Categories
The Nordstrom Anniversary Sale has finally opened up to the general public meaning that anyone and everyone can take advantage of these fantastic prices on brand new items, kits, and sets.
It’s that time of year again: the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale is finally here. If you have shopped this sale before, you know how glorious the whole event is. If you haven’t yet, let me clue you in.
It’s not your typical sale either where the store marks down older season products they’re trying to get rid of. In fact, Nordstrom launches new products, sets, kits, and exclusives just for the Anniversary Sale and discounts them for a limited time before they return to their retail price in stores and online on August 5.
Yes! the Anniversary Sale officially ends on August 5 and then prices go back up on August 6. Start shopping now if you haven’t yet. Don’t wait until the last day to shop because many of these products will be sold out very quickly.
This message will appear when a visitor comes to your Tumblr. Go to Customize > Theme and paste THIS code between <head> and </head> tags. Replace YOUR MESSAGE HERE with the text you’d like your visitor to see.
The way Tumblr is built means you can use a certain set of URL tricks on any of these Tumblr-hosted blogs, whether created by media powerhouses or teenage nerds. They work on custom domains hosted at Tumblr too. Here’s how to master Tumblr with the power of your URL bar.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /random
Append “random” to the end of any Tumblr address to see a random post plucked from somewhere between today and the date the blog first started publishing. Many Tumblrs have a “random” link you can click on. Handy for those times when you want to see something different from the archives.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /archive
Speaking of archives, stick “archive” after the main site address to see every previous post on the blog, ordered by month and set out in an easy-to-use thumbnail grid layout. You can browse by month and by year using the menus and check out exactly when your favorite Tumblr first started posting.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /rss
We know you’re still out there, RSS lovers, and when “rss” is placed at the end of a site address you get its official feed. Plug the address into your RSS reader of choice and never miss a new post — you can keep up with your favorite Tumblr blogs without having to subscribe to them in the dashboard.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /tagged/tagofchoice
Replace “tagofchoice” with any tag to see matching blog posts. Sometimes Tumblrs will have this as an option within the navigation links, but nevertheless it’s a useful way of digging up older or more relevant posts, particularly if the site in question covers all kinds of different topics.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /tagged/tagofchoice/rss
Now we’re really through the looking glass. Combine the tag trick with the RSS trick and you have a custom-made RSS feed that only includes posts with a particular tag. Load this feed into something like IFTTT and you can really start to get creative, assuming the site admins are tagging posts correctly…
yourblog.tumblr.com… /tagged/tagofchoice/chrono
Append “chrono” to the end of a tag search address and the posts appear in chronological order with the oldest one shown first. If you have a stack of photos, film reviews or anything else tagged on your own blog, then this is a quick and easy way of finding the first posts you published.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /search/searchterm
Don’t let the lack of a dedicated search box stop you from searching through a Tumblr blog—enter the URL above with your search term in the relevant place to run a query. Use the “+” symbol instead of space if you want to try looking for a phrase instead of a single word using the Tumblr URL.
yourblog.tumblr.com… /day/yyyy/mm/dd
Find posts from a particular day with this hack, which can help you revisit updates from this time last year or focused around a particular event. If you post a lot on your own personal Tumblr blog then it can help you sort through the clutter and find something specific (assuming you know the post date).
A Surreal Dream in Black and White From Maria Grazia Chiuri at Christian Dior Haute Couture
Illusion d'Optique, Géométrie Et Kaléidoscope De Tons Noir/Blanc - J'Adore Dior
In The Mood OF Paris Fashion Week
10 years ago this Sunday, with modest expectations and little fanfare, Marco and I launched a side-project called Tumblr—a place where anyone could “post anything and customize everything.”
Why did the world need Tumblr? I wasn’t sure it did. But I did.
2006
The net is vast and infinite. The web browser has become a multimedia powerhouse. “Social media” is upending news and entertainment. One-year-old YouTube has created a phenomenon of “viral video.” Google hits for “podcast” have jumped from 100-thousand to 100-million in less than a year. Twitter has just launched. And the “blogosphere” has become the voice of millions, with the total number of blogs now doubling every six months. Dope.
But for all this progress, some of the internet’s brightest promise is fading. The wide-open and whimsical frontier of the World Wide Web is being reshaped by strict, narrow platforms. Our pictures, videos, music, journals, articles, links, status updates, are spread across a dozen different networks—each specializing in a single medium. The infinitely expressive canvas of HTML has been eclipsed by directories of vanilla-white profile pages. Our digital identities are fractured and engineers make the rules.
Enter TumblehubTumblespot Tumblr, a modest solution inspired by an avant-garde community of bloggers calling themselves “tumbleloggers.” The premise, simply, to make space for each individual’s full range of expression. A median between the author’s unfiltered and editorial voice. With complete control over design and presentation, so anyone can create something that truly represents themselves and that is truly unique.
2007
After four months of running my own blog on Tumblr, making tweaks and improvements, we open to the public. Hundreds of thousands of people begin using Tumblr to share some of the most eclectic, clever, and beautiful things we’ve ever seen on the internet.
We are humbled and awestruck.
Racing to keep up, every feature we add attempts to stretch the canvas a little bit more, pushed by this community’s constant and boundless creativity. Five months in, you have captured our hearts. We work up the courage to pursue Tumblr full time.
With a new purpose and braveinvestors, we close down our web development business and reopen as Tumblr, Inc.
2017
336 million Tumblrs. 146 billion posts. And counting.
A generation of artists, writers, creators, curators, and crusaders that have redefined our culture.
I can’t say this enough: Thank you, thank you, thank you for making Tumblr everything that it is. For everything we’ve built, and all its shortcomings, you have managed to make this one of the most creative, lively, thoughtful, supportive, and open-minded corners of the world.
We have learned so much from you and been so moved by your voices.
The Next Ten Years
The internet is at a crossroads again.
Internet culture has become the prevalent, global culture. These networks expose us to new ideas and information but–too often–trap us in bubbles. The world has been compressed, and we are constantly challenged to reconcile our differences.
With so many barriers to digital expression now lifted, and nearly all modes of media supported across all platforms, there is now an unprecedented opportunity to dedicate this space to freedom, truth, expanded perspective, and positive influence in the world. Tumblr’s focus over the next decade will shift accordingly.
Expression has been and always will be a foundational part of Tumblr—and our roadmap this year will not disappoint—but it is now more urgent than ever to empower positive and productive connections across the communities that thrive here. To create an environment where people are truly safe to be themselves. To ensure positive discourse rises above toxicity. And to protect the free exchange of ideas, from which truth will emerge.
We still have so much to prove and so much we’ve promised you. With this renewed focus, we are determined to deliver.
One Last Thing
From the bottom of my heart, thank you to everyone working on, and who has ever worked on, Tumblr. I’ve learned so much from all of you, and it is a privilege to come to work with so many brilliant and talented people. We couldn’t have done any of this without your maniacal devotion throughout this journey.
In this tutorial, we’ll guide you through adding links to your theme’s description that often displays in the header or sidebar.
Step one: Open the “edit theme” page
1. Log into Tumblr and click on the ’human’ cog icon and Select your blog from the right-hand column.
2. Click the Edit appearance option.
3. Click Edit theme
Step two: changing your description
I’ve highlighted the box where you can add your description.
To add to your description, simply type something in the box.
When you want to add links, copy and paste this into your box:
<a href="http://quickguide.tumblr.com/">Link to Quick Guide</a>
Replace “http://quickguide.tumblr.com/” with the website you want people to go to (make sure you include the http:// part, or the link won’t work), and replace “Link to Quick Guide” with words you want people to see.
For example, in my site description box, I’ve added two links to a Tumblr blog, and Instagram account:
Now, when I open my Tumblr blog, you can see the links:
Other tips
To make a line break (a “gap”) in your description, paste the following code in your description:
In this tutorial, we’ll guide you through adding links to your theme’s description that often displays in the header or sidebar.
Step one: Open the “edit theme” page
1. Log into Tumblr and click on the ’human’ cog icon and Select your blog from the right-hand column.
2. Click the Edit appearance option.
3. Click Edit theme
Step two: changing your description
I’ve highlighted the box where you can add your description.
To add to your description, simply type something in the box.
When you want to add links, copy and paste this into your box:
<a href="http://quickguide.tumblr.com/">Link to Quick Guide</a>
Replace “http://quickguide.tumblr.com/” with the website you want people to go to (make sure you include the http:// part, or the link won’t work), and replace “Link to Quick Guide” with words you want people to see.
For example, in my site description box, I’ve added two links to a Tumblr blog, and Instagram account:
Now, when I open my Tumblr blog, you can see the links:
Other tips
To make a line break (a “gap”) in your description, paste the following code in your description:
Bonjour! Hi! Welcome Onboard Tumblr community! I'm FHMP. This Kimlud.eu is still my @kimludcom Tumblr Blog for #TumblrPost format - you can load it easily via your mobile device from the www.kimlud.eu/archive. For more about cultural media I reblog sometimes or the creations I post, dive into Kimlud.eu Archive.
KIMLUD.COM is people sophisticated, chic, stylish fashion and, a tech-powered ecosystem with quality products, lifestyle stories and, cultural content.. Kimlud inspires and empowers women to look and feel good. All home decor, fashion and beauty products I post here reflect the influences of the life I live, the work I do, the people I meet, the art I enjoy, the books I read, the music I listen to, the places I travel to and the global culture we all are creating and are immersed in. I'm on a mission to spark authentic self-expression through style to help you live your most expansive, expressive, meaningful, progressive and, modern lifestyle. The easygoing way to FOLLOW and TAG me on Social media is with: @kimludcom #kimludcom