#Beryl Sinclair
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cat-webp · 1 month ago
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wedding cake cookie npt
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💍 ꒱ names
ㅤaden, albert, alonso, ambrose, archie, baker, basil, baxter, casimir, cecil, coleman, cosmo, daniel, fraser, gabriel, godfrey, harvey, jasper, kellen, kipling, lance, linwood, lucian, melville, oliver, piers, selwyn, shane, shawn, silas, soren, sterling, stetson, sylvester, thomas, vincent, wolfe
ㅤabbey, adelaide, alanis, alice, amelia, amora, angelica, annabelle, azalea, beatrice, belle, beryl, birdie, blanche, cadence, caitlyn, carmen, carrie, cecelia, chanel, charlotte, claribel, dahlia, dottie, edith, elaine, elora, erin, evangelina, faithe, felicity, fern, gardenia, gemma, giselle, grace, gwen, hailey, harriet, hazel, heather, holly, ione, isabelle, jasmine, juliet, juniper, layla, lily-rose, lorelei, lorraine, lynette, maisie, marie, marnie, melanie, mimi, misty, odelia, paisley, primrose, renee, rosabel, saffron, seraphina, serenity, sienna, sylvia, tallulah, tara, tatiana, tawny, teagan, teresa, trinity, valerie, verity, whitney, willow, wisteria, wren
ㅤaddison, amery, aster, beau, beverly, blessing, bronte, campbell, cedar, dior, emery, fran, francis, garnett, harper, haven, jewel, laverne, merle, monroe, onyx, raine, sage, sinclair, sunday, taylor, vivian, windsor
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💐 ꒱ pronouns
ㅤae/aer, vae/vaer
ㅤbless/blessings, bou/quet, ca/cake, cre/cream, crea/creativity, day/dream, decor/decorations, design/designer, determined/determination, dre/dreams, ele/gants, enchant/enchanting, flo/flowers, fun/funs, graci/gracious, grand/grands, happy/happys, ici/icing, lo/love, magic/magical, pale/pales, perf/perfection, rose/roses, smi/smiles, special/specials, sweet/cream, sweet/sweetness, wed/wedding, whi/white
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💍 ꒱ titles
ㅤthe wedding planner, [x] who makes brides happy, [x] who'll plan your perfect reception, [x] who brings magic to all attendees, the elegance of marriage, [x] who brings dreams to reality, the cookie with elegant icing, [x] who's loyal to [x] customers, [x] who never misses a detail, [x] who accepts your design challenge, [x] sweetness, the pale-adorned planner, [x] who'll bless your marriage
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coochiequeens · 7 months ago
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The Flying Bats have attributed their success to an “investment in a dedicated coaching position” rather than to the physical advantages their (5) male players have over the female football players they compete against.
By Genevieve Gluck September 23, 2024
An Australian “trans inclusive” Premier League women’s football team with multiple male players has scored another win yesterday against a women’s team. The Flying Bats Football Club will now progress into the women’s championships after defeating the Leichhardt Saints, 3-2.
The Flying Bats FC, which has at least five confirmed male participants, emerged victorious yesterday during Round 2 of the Premier League Football New South Wales (FNSW) Champion of Champions knockout competition. The Saints, an all-female team, has now lost the opportunity to compete in the finals, leaving the Bats one step closer to winning the women’s title. According to the FNSW website, the Champion of Champions tournament is one of the most prestigious tournaments in the footballing calendar, with champions from each association pitted against each other in a “battle for supremacy.”
During the game yesterday, one of the trans-identified males on the Flying Bats team received one red card and two yellow cards – indicating serious in-game infractions for which he was ultimately pulled from the match completely.
Prior to the competition, the Leichhardt Saints women’s team had previously been undefeated all season. But the Flying Bats had a similar track record, winning all 17 games last season and scoring 76 goals while only a total of 8 points were scored against them. The Flying Bats have attributed their success to an “investment in a dedicated coaching position” rather than to the physical advantages their male players have over the female football players they compete against.
The Flying Bats is next scheduled to play against the Colo Soccer Football Club on September 29. The finals will be held closer to the end of October.
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Earlier this year the team was awarded a $1,000 prize after winning the North West Sydney League pre-season Beryl Ackroyd Cup, following a season of winning every game they played in the Women’s Premier League matches, 10-0. The news generated significant outcry and resulted in The Flying Bats making international headlines.
Last month, Reduxx reported that The Flying Bats, a football club for “self-identified women and non-binary people,” had won the Grand Final 5-4 over West Pennant Hills Cherrybrook Football Club. Due to the significant criticism the football club has attracted over the past year, security guards were present at the game and conducted bag checks, requiring all who attended to ditch their recording devices.
However, nearly 200 photos of yesterday’s match were published online, and Reduxx can now definitively name the five male players in the Flying Bats Women’s Football Club as Raili Haagensen, Josephine Massingham, Mattie Noble, Lian Sinclair, and Riley Dennis.
Dennis, born Justin and formerly a trans activist YouTuber, was previously identified by Reduxx as a player for the Flying Bats Women’s Premier League. Before transferring to the Flying Bats FC, Dennis was previously accused of severely injuring women while participating in matches for the New South Wales Inter Lions.
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On May 21, 2023, during a game between the Inter Lions and the St. George football clubs at the Majors Bay Reserve, Dennis launched his smaller female opponent towards a metal fence using an aggressive tackle as the two chased down the ball.
Reduxx was provided footage of the match, which showed the female player laying on her side, unmoving, as the transgender player casually walked away. The month prior, Dennis was said to have injured another female player, who reportedly had to seek hospital attention as a result of her injury.
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Mattie Noble, right, a man who claims a transgender status, competed for the Flying Bats FC against the all-female Leichhardt Saints FC. Photo: Robert Owe-Young
An anonymous source close to the situation explained to Reduxx that Dennis left the Inter Lions team following last year’s controversy. The source stated that Dennis then submitted at least three applications of interest for other teams, which were not accepted. The Flying Bats, however, approved his application to join the team. The football club’s official website states it is “the biggest LGBTQIA+ women’s and non-binary football club in the world,” having been founded in 1985.
The source told Reduxx that all of the known men competing for the Flying Bats FC in the Premier League are approximately 6 feet tall or slightly over, with Dennis standing at about 6’4″.
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Raili Haagensen / Photo: Robert Owe-Young
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Josephine Massingham / Photo: Robert Owe-Young
Another trans-identified male competing against women for the Flying Bats FC in the AA1 league is Lian Sinclair, a postdoctoral research associate in “critical mineral global production” at the University of Sydney.
In 2015, an academic queer theory paper authored by Sinclair titled “Magical Genders: The Gender(s) of Witches in the historical Imagination of Terry Pratchett’s Discworld” was published in the journal Mythlore. In the article, Sinclair discusses the “gendered history of witches and wizards in the consensus fantasy universe to explicitly challenge the error of gendered truth.”
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Lian Sinclair. Source: LinkedIn
On social media, Sinclair mocks women critical of gender ideology as “TERFs”, a pejorative acronym which stands for “trans-exclusionary radical feminist” and is often used in the context of threatening violence or abusive harassment. In March of last year, following a widely-publicized women’s rights demonstration in Melbourne which was unexpectedly attended by neo-Nazis, Sinclair posted to social media his thoughts on “TERF flirtations with Nazis.”
The Flying Bats FC has come under fire internally in the recent past, with other football clubs and coaches expressing concerns over the strength and size of the males competing in the club.
In March, the President of the St. Patrick’s FC, Frank Parisi, brought his concerns to the Northwest Sydney Football Association (NWSFA). In leaked audio of the meeting, Parisi could be heard informing the Association that he had lost more than 20 female players because they had refused to compete against the Flying Bats. Parisi also revealed that one of his female players had her leg broken by a trans-identified male associated with the Flying Bats, and that she had been penalized for “transphobia” following her injury.
During the meeting, which was attended by the CEO of Football NSW John Tsatsimas and convened by CEO of NWSF, Matthew Geracitano, attendees were also told that a decision to boycott participation by forfeiting matches against The Flying Bats would result in “disciplinary action” being issued.
According to regulations put forward by the NWSFA, “players may register and participate on the basis of their gender identification.” There are thought to be a total of at least nine trans-identified males playing football within the women’s leagues, though their identities have been protected and withheld by Australian media.
Last year, after releasing an article revealing Riley Dennis as the transgender football player accused of injuring female players at a women’s game, Reduxx was contacted by the eSafety Commissioner of Australia and advised to censor or delete the article.
The eSafety Commissioner then targeted social media users who had shared information from the Reduxx article on Dennis. One platform targeted, Ovarit, was encouraged to either delete the comments “misgendering” Dennis, or suspend the users responsible.
EDIT 9/23/24: A previous version of the article incorrectly failed to specify the match was a qualifier for the final championship, not the championship game itself.
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basiilgarden · 1 year ago
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⋆。°✩ Celestellaron character list ✩°。⋆
Organized in order of when the character was claimed ~ Characters with posted profiles on tumblr will have it linked and their name will be colored ~ If you’d like to claim someone, send me an ask or a discord message
Vanya Hemlock (Kafka) - @geminiiviolets
Saber (Blade) - @rosietrace
Nero Horatia (Silver Wolf) - @rosietrace
Beryl Lathika (Himeko) - @authoruio
Sun Jian (Dan Heng/ Imbibitor Lunae) - @terrovaniadorm
Sadya de Runa (Sampo) - @authoruio
Guan Zǐ-Xīn (Jing Yuan) -@silent-dragon
Venus Radix (Dr. Ratio) - @twsted-princess
Sinclair Roisin (Argenti) - @terrovaniadorm
Bailu - @wanou-dorm
Casper (Huohuo) - @authoruio
Black Swan - @geminiiviolets
Lady Slinger (Boothill) - @terrovaniadorm
Stefano Flavia (Aventurine) - @sakuramidnight15
Guinafen
Topaz
Cailean Hound (Gallagher) - @terrovaniadorm
Nightingale Sanctus (Robin) - @terrovaniadorm
Dove Sanctus (Sunday) - @terrovaniadorm
Misha - @twsted-princess
Firefly - @twsted-princess
Luocha - @silent-dragon
Jasper Drakon (Jade) - @geminiiviolets
Ruan Mei - @nem0-nee
Acheron - @revivemyreverie
Hikari Ibara (Sparkle) - @rosietrace
Jiaoqiu - @sakuramidnight15
Redirect back to Celestellaron main post
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periodicapartments · 11 months ago
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Totally Canon PA Quotes #314
*at a tea party* Beryl: Hey, which one of you was going to tell me that tea tastes different if you put it in hot water? Thales: Y-you were putting it in cold water????? Titania: Beryl. Answer the question Beryl. Beryl: Yeah??? I only drink sweet tea normally so I thought for like 5 years that people just put it in hot water to speed up the... the "tea-ification" process, I didn't realize there's an actual reason. Schuyler: You don't have the patience to microwave water for 3 minutes??? Thales: *looking disgusted* Why are you putting it in the microwave to boil it?! Schuyler: Do you think I have the patience to boil water on the stove? Thales: *stands up yelling* It takes less than a minute!! Schuyler: Dude, is your stovetop powered by the freaking sun?! Thales: How long does it take you to boil a cup of water on the stove?!? Schuyler: L-like seven minutes! Irfan: Ugh, just stick the mug on top of the stove on medium heat and it boils in like two minutes, any less than that and you use a saucepan. Thales: *turns to look at him confused* You're putting the whole mug on the stove???? On medium heat???? Your stove is enchanted... Sinclair: *facepalming* Everyone here is a freaking lunatic... Titania: Do none of you own a freaking kettle?!
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inexpensiveprogress · 5 years ago
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Beryl Maude Sinclair
Beryl Sinclair is one of those names that I love to find. Born in 1901, Beryl Bowker was the daughter of the Dr. G. E. Bowker, a Physician at the Bath Royal United Hospital. She lived with her mother and father in Combe Park, Bath. She studied at the Royal College of Art alongside Edward Bawden and Eric Ravilious.
She was both a painter in oils and watercolours, as well as a potter.
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 Eric Ravilious - Morley College Mural - Life in a Boarding House, 1929
At the RCA she was known as Bowk. Ravilious painted her twice that we know, once into the Colwyn Bay Pier Murals by Ravilious in the kitchen with a plant and then again in one of the ‘lost’ Ravilious oil paintings - ‘Bowk at the sink’, 1929-30.
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 Eric Ravilious - Newhaven Harbour, 1935
She married Robert Sinclair, a London author and journalist, who wrote the Country Book on East London in 1950. The painting above by Ravilious was bought from the Zwemmer Gallery by Beryl Sinclair. 
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 Beryl Sinclair - Regents Park, The Horseguards
They were living at 170 Gloucester Place, London. It might explain why many of her early paintings are of Regents Park as it's less than 200 metres away.
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 Beryl Sinclair - Regents Park, Sussex Place
In 1939 she was part of the Artists International Association – Everyman's Print series contributing two prints, The Row and Riding Procession. The AIA Everyman Prints exhibition was opened on 30 January by Sir Kenneth Clark.
In the early 1940s she was the Chairman of the Artists International Association.
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Essentially set up as a radically left political organisation, the AIA embraced all styles of art both modernist and traditional, but the core committee preferenced realism. Its later aim was to promote the "Unity of Artists for Peace, Democracy and Cultural Development". It held a series of large group exhibitions on political and social themes beginning in 1935 with an exhibition entitled Artists Against Fascism and War.
The AIA supported the left-wing Republican side in the Spanish Civil War through exhibitions and other fund-raising activities. The Association was also involved in the settling of artists displaced by the Nazi regime in Germany. Many of those linked with the Association, such as Duncan Grant were also pacifists.
Another of the AIA's aims was to promote wider access to art through travelling exhibitions and public mural paintings.‡
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 Beryl Sinclair - Regents Park, Sussex Place
In late 1940s she was the Chair of the Woman’s International Art Club. The Women's International Art Club, briefly known as the Paris International Art Club, was founded in Paris in 1900. The club was intended to "promote contacts between women artists of all nations and to arrange exhibitions of their work", it provided a way for women to exhibit their art work. The membership of the club was international, and there were sections in France, Greece, Holland, Italy and the United States.
During WW2 she was part of a touring exhibition of art:
John Alridge, Michael Rotherstein, John Armstrong, Kenneth Rowntree, Beryl Sinclair, and Geoffrey Rhoades. The paintings are touring Essex. They have already been to Maldon, Colchester, and Braintree. †
She then joined the Council of Imperial Arts League in 1952 becoming the chairman in 1958. 
During the war she was commissioned by Sir Kenneth Clark to execute paintings for the Civil Service canteen. She also contributed to the Cambridge Pictures for Schools scheme. She exhibited at the Royal Academy, New English Art Club, the London Group, Womans International Art Club, Artists International Association and shows at Leicester Galleries. Her work is in the collection of the Arts Council, The British Government, The Council for the Encouragement of Music and Art, Buckinghamshire County Museum
When married she moved to White Cottage, Grimsdell’s Lane, Amsersham in Buckinghamshire. 
Beryl Sinclair died in 1967.
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 Beryl Sinclair Studio Pottery Mark.
† Chelmsford Chronicle: Friday 13 November 1942 ‡ Wikipedia AIA
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diana-wisteria · 5 years ago
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My OCs as Text Messages I send to my friends:
Diana: If i were a greek philosopher then I would call myself pesto.
(Edit, response from friend: Pesto is Italian.)
Tabitha: ITS NOT ME ITS MY 2ND PERSONALITY. WAIT MY SECOND PERSONALITY LEFT ME.
Rebecca: During night time, I had a dream. Here's an quote "I know 2 cherry types. Cherry and Soap."
Nathaniel: How does love smell?
(Edit, response from friend: Like Chips.)
Velvet: I always confound the words suicide and squid. But theres a real difference when I say "Hey I do squid or I'm going to watch a suicide in an zoo."
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cextra-loz · 2 years ago
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Oh anime is your comfort series? Oh you are anime girl obsessed?
name eveyr anime girl >:3
2B (Nier: Automata)
Mikasa Ackerman
Yūko Aioi
Taiga Aisaka
Ritsuko Akagi
Moka Akashiya
Homura Akemi
Alita (Battle Angel Alita)
Misa Amane
Android 18
Anita Hailey
Ann Takamaki
Aqua (KonoSuba)
Ami Asai
Athena Asamiya
Mina Ashido
Tsuyu Asui
Asuna (Sword Art Online)
Cagalli Yula Athha
Atoli
Rei Ayanami
Ilia
Baby Bonnie Hood
Belldandy
Benten (Urusei Yatsura)
Queen Beryl
Blossom (The Powerpuff Girls)
Boa Hancock
Alisa Bosconovitch
Euphemia li Britannia
Sarah Bryant (Virtua Fighter)
Bulma
C.C. (Code Geass)
Cammy
Carrot (One Piece)
Caulifla and Kale
Michelle Chang (Tekken)
Chi (Chobits)
Chi-Chi (Dragon Ball)
Chun-Li
Lacus Clyne
Jolyne Cujoh
Tomoyo Daidouji
Golden Darkness
Dejiko
Lala Satalin Deviluke
Momo Belia Deviluke
Nana Astar Deviluke
Chrome Dokuro
Ed (Cowboy Bebop)
Elena (Street Fighter)
Emma (The Promised Neverland)
Ami Enan
Junko Enoshima
Etna (Disgaea)
Felicia (Darkstalkers)
Maya Fey
Mia Fey
Pearl Fey
Anya Forger
Yor Forger
Haruhi Fujioka
Chika Fujiwara
Toko Fukawa
Yuno Gasai
Rias Gremory
Toru Hagakure
Sakura Haruno
Hatsune Miku
Misa Hayase
Lucy Heartfilia
Leona Heidern
Hestia (character)
Kagome Higurashi
Himawari Kunogi
Hinako (anime character)
Tohru Honda
Hsien-Ko
Hinata Hyuga
Yuko Ichihara
Midari Ikishima
Orihime Inoue
Lum (Urusei Yatsura)
Konata Izumi
Sagiri Izumi
Yumeko Jabami
Oscar François de Jarjayes
Kyoka Jiro
Abigail Jones
Juri (Street Fighter)
Jynx
Kagura (Azumanga Daioh)
Kaho Mizuki
Nezuko Kamado
Kamiya Kaoru
Madoka Kaname Midna
Mitsuri Kanroji
Urumi Kanzaki
Karin Kanzuki
Yuu Kashima
Ayumu Kasuga
Sakura Kasugano
Misato Katsuragi
Tomie Kawakami
Ami Kawashima
Nadeshiko Kinomoto
Sakura Kinomoto
Kyoko Kirigiri
Saya Kisaragi
Miyuki Kobayakawa
Kohane Tsuyuri
Yuri Koigakubo
Yotsuba Koiwai
Kirino Kosaka
Yui Kotegawa
Koyomi Mizuhara
Rukia Kuchiki
Nobara Kugisaki
Minamo Kurosawa
Motoko Kusanagi
Minori Kushieda
Anna Kyoyama
Lady (Devil May Cry)
Nunnally Lamperouge
Leafa
Connie Lee (Dr. Stone)
Lenalee Lee
Lillie (Pokémon)
Lina Inverse
Luna (Sailor Moon)
Makimachi Misao
Mari Illustrious Makinami
Hitomi Manaka
Mako Mankanshoku
Wendy Marvell
Ayeka Masaki Jurai
Ryūko Matoi
Sakura Matou
Megumin
Meiling Li
Chiyo Mihama
Sayaka Miki
Mai Minakami
Fujiko Mine
Lynn Minmay
Mikoto Misaka
Misty (Pokémon)
Kirari Momobami
Ririka Momobami
Morrigan Aensland
Multi (To Heart)
Naga the Serpent
Mio Naganohara
Yuki Nagato
Nino Nakano
Nakoruru
Nakuru Akizuki
Nami (One Piece)
Chiaki Nanami
Naru Narusegawa
Atsuko Natsume
Nausicaä (Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind)
Queen Nehelenia
Nico Robin
Darya Nikitina
Chisato Nishikigi
Himari Noihara
Arale Norimaki
Nyaruko
Yuzuriha Ogawa
Mamako Oosuki
Paninya
Suo Pavlichenko
Yomiko Readman
Rem (Re:Zero)
Revy (Black Lagoon)
Ritsu (Assassination Classroom)
Ritsuko Akagi (Neon Genesis Evangelion)
Winry Rockbell
Roll (Mega Man)
Rose (Street Fighter)
Rebecca Rossellini
Ruri (Dr. Stone)
Saber (Fate/stay night)
Haruna Sairenji
Sakaki (Azumanga Daioh)
Yuri Sakazaki
Sakura (Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicle)
Chiyo Sakura
Kyoko Sakura
Haruko Sakurai
Izumi Sakurai
Shirō Sakurai
Mary Saotome
Ranma Saotome
Chie Satonaka
Erza Scarlet
Senko-san
Yuzuki Seo
Serena (Pokémon)
Yoruichi Shihōin
Mika Shimotsuki
Kaguya Shinomiya
Hakase Shinonome
Kuroko Shirai
Mai Shiranui
Noelle Silva
Elexis Sinclaire
Sinon (Sword Art Online)
Skuld (Oh My Goddess!)
Sonomi Daidouji
Asuka Langley Soryu
Kallen Stadtfeld
Celty Sturluson
Suika (Dr. Stone)
Super Sonico Sonichu
Haruhi Suzumiya (character)
Secre Swallowtail
Swindler (Akudama Drive)
Kiyomi Takada
Saya Takagi (character)
Sora Takenouchi
Taki (Soulcalibur)
Tomo Takino
Yukari Tanizaki
Utena Tenjou
Teresa Beria
Origami Tobiichi
Rin Tohsaka
Mami Tomoe
Trish (Devil May Cry)
Ayu Tsukimiya
Akane Tsunemori
Sarada Uchiha
Ulala (Space Channel 5)
Ochaco Uraraka
Urd (Oh My Goddess!)
Hana Uzaki
Kiri Uzaki
Tsuki Uzaki
Yanagi Uzaki
Shion Uzuki
Faye Valentine
Mereoleona Vermillion
Mimosa Vermillion
Videl
Anna Williams (Tekken)
Elf Yamada
Momo Yaoyorozu
Akari Yukimura
Mikan Yuuki
Maki Zen'in Zelda
Zero Two
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poboh · 3 years ago
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Flowers in a blue vase, 1939, Beryl Maude Sinclair (1901 - 1967) - Oil on Canvas -
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cognacdelights · 5 years ago
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Teenage Dirtbags | 002. — A Right Hook A Day
Summary: In which, an out of control teenager is sentenced to a summer in the Outer Banks to come to come to terms with her mother’s untimely death, and reform her rebellious, troublesome ways before she does irreversible damage.
Authot’s Note: Sooo this is the second chapter of the “Teenage Dirtbags” series and it’s one of my favourite things that I’ve ever written. Marnie was my original child (before Indie - although Indie is lowkey my favourite), and there is so much of myself in her so I hope you love her as much as I do. As always, masterlists will be linked below and feel free to message me, pop an ask in my ask box or reply to this if you would like to be added to the taglist. 
Warnings: This series may contain mature themes/content throughout including but not limited to swearing, sexual language and/or scenes, substance abuse and mentions of death. 
Word Count: 3367.
Teenage Dirtbags Series Masterlist.
Fill The Void General Masterlist.
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This gif is not mine, all credit goes to the owner. 
002. — A Right Hook A Day
There were several trivial pleasures in life that Marnie Sinclaire just couldn't resist; cherry pie, boys and a party. There was just something about the unmistakable, alluring aroma of cheap beer, teenage lust and bad decisions that really got her endorphins flowing. Parties were her safe space - her haven; they were the one place on Earth that Marnie could do just about whatever she wanted, whatever numbed the hollow, vacant ache that haunted her chest, and she never had to take even so much as a slither of the blame. She was devoid of all and absolute responsibility. If she was a tease, it was all down to the entrancing, provocative music they were playing. If she so happened to kiss somebody’s boyfriend, it was the infinite number of premium, export strength vodka shots that persuaded her to do it. If she found herself embroiled within a vicious cat-fight with the spiteful, pretentious girls from across the river - it was the obligatory capsules of molly, not her. It was never her. There was always some kind of justification that excused her reckless and wild behaviour, and that made her feel invincible for those sole, precious hours of anarchy.
So, when the audacious, unruly brunette found herself graciously clambering down the drain pipe of her grandparents' house, it was of no surprise to the girl. Despite her impassive, frigid reception of the boy with the devilish glint lurking within the amber speckles of his dark, mocha eyes, he had tempted her into joining them down at the boneyard. Although, admittedly, Marnie didn't need much convincing when it came to partaking in boozy social gatherings - and there was a minimal internal debate on whether she should test the waters with her grandparents so early in her sentence. Of course, in true Marnie Sinclaire fashion, she had opted to. After spinning them an improvised, fabricated exaggeration of how the eight and a half hour journey to the Outer Banks had utterly wiped her out, and proceeding to inform them of her plans to recuperate with an early night, she disappeared up the varnished, cedar wood staircase. Several outfit changes and a nonchalant application of peach-tinted lip gloss later, and she was descending from the perilous heights of her second story window.
By the time Marnie had reached the section of beach that had affectionately been nicknamed the boneyard, the ruthless, Mid-Atlantic sun had retreated behind the distant horizon. A captivating concoction of magenta hues and coral tinges had painted themselves across the Outer Banks skyline in a vibrant, bewitching haze, and the previously unbearable humidity had dissipated into a comfortably tepid draught. It had still been relatively light when she had committed her great escape - however she was unfamiliar with the intricate island pathways and had to rely merely on the tinny echoes of the teens' portable speaker to locate the unwinding get together. Marnie may have taken the scenic route, courtesy of her underdeveloped sense of direction, but she had eventually arrived.
All of half an hour had passed since the bright-eyed, fair-skinned beauty's arrival at the ocean-front gathering, yet she had found herself engulfed in a crowd of loafer-clad, polo-shirt-adorning country club boys. However, there was one mousy-haired, stiff-jawed boy in particular that Marnie had made a particular impression on; the playful, wicked glint that occupied her luminous, cerulean eyes had lured him in - but the acid-wash, denim shorts that desperately clung to the curvaceous contours of her slim-lined figure had ultimately seduced him. His large, gentle hand rested on the exposed skin of her upper thigh, as his soft, coaxing lips brushed ever so slightly against the delicate skin of her pierced earlobe, "you look incredible." A subtle waft of his Paco Rabanne aftershave filled her nostrils as his deep, raspy tone purred amorously into her ear. It was a scent which she knew oh too well, yet one that never really impressed her. It was more of a distasteful, indiscreet display of wealth rather than for the sake of actual hygiene purposes.  
"Just incredible?" Marnie challenged with a low, flirtatious hum - mimicking his ardent tone. Her sprightly, indigo eyes nonchalantly fluttered closed the second his masterful, delicate lips connected with the nape of her neck. The fair-haired boy began to litter sloppy, yet lustfully tender, kisses along her rose-tinted skin - mumbling a barrage of incoherent compliments in the process. His placid, velvet-like fingertips reached the sensitive plains of her inner thigh, leisurely encroaching on the lightly frayed hem of her sleek, denim shorts. The obviously well-off boy was very much aware that he was pushing his luck with the entrancing Brooklyn native, nevertheless he continued on with his pursuit into the uncharted territory - aiming to be the first in the race to place down his metaphorical flag and claim the terrain as his own in a bid for self validation.
"You are a fucking goddess," his fervid, lustful words vibrated against her freckled, alabaster complexion - his voice thick and gravelly - as her wandering mind fixated on the intense, rhythmic pulsing radiating from the nearby speaker. Marnie responded subconsciously by arching her back, as the heat of his whiskey-laced breath tantalised her most sensitive of nerves. "There's so many things that I want to do to you, princess" he proceeded to purr hankeringly, "so many positions that I want to take you in, so many places that I want to make you cum." She could feel the intrepid warmth of his dauntless fingertips intruding beneath the hemline of her shorts, a mere millimetres reach from the champagne, flower-patterned lace of her g-string.
"Slow down, Usain Bolt. This is a marathon, not a sprint," Marnie teased - her voice laced frivolously with her signature, provocative tenor. Her dainty lavender-painted fingertips coiled themselves around his wrist, guiding his meandering, clammy palms from beneath the frazzled hemline of her figure-hugging shorts. Casually, she turned her head to peer upwards at the upper-class boy, her beryl orbs occupying a sprightly glimmer as the corners of her glazed lips curled upwards into an innocent smile. "How about I get us some drinks?"
Removing herself from the confinements of his sordid, sun-burnt grasp, Marnie left the boy little time to object, beginning her leisurely stroll along the picturesque tidelands. The coarse silt particles beneath her off-white, worn-in Converse was uneven - and shifted unpredictably in every which direction under the light pressure of her footsteps. As someone accustomed to the static tarmac of Brooklyn's infamous streets, the doe-eyed brunette found the malleable surface difficult to navigate. It was yet another minute detail on an ever-growing list of contradictions to the world she was so fondly acquainted with, and desired to be reunited with.
Only a few, short minutes had passed before the troublesome vixen had - quite literally - stumbled upon the queue of drunken partygoers leading up to the beer keg, the ivory sand loosening beneath her cautious footsteps. The oddly alluring fragrance of cheap, low percentage beer forcefully invaded her airways, giving Marnie the unrivalled feeling of home; she relished in the one, trivial comfort she had managed to locate on the insufferable, out-of-touch island as she waited patiently for the line to diminish. There were several boys in the queue before her; all three of them drastically exceeding six foot, bare-chested and their tanned complexions adorning flattering splatters of salt water droplets that reflected celestially under the fire-lit lanterns.
As she eventually reached the front of the queue, Marnie was greeted by a much anticipated familiar face. The same golden-skinned boy who had delivered groceries to her grandparents' house stood before her - his large palm swaddling the beer tap, as his brawny, athletic figure guarded the half-empty keg. A haughty, complacent smirk etched itself into his defined features; after his earlier, sullen encounter with the pale-skinned virago, he was taken aback by her presence - but not disappointed. "Well, well, we-"
"Payment is required upfront," the brash, blonde-haired boy beside John B drowned out his mocking tone with his bold, cocksure words. A dauntless grin had proudly painted itself across his sun-kissed complexion, as his piercing, cobalt eyes glanced downwards at the petite, cinnamon-haired girl - appreciating all the fine, minute details of her being. Her skin, although pale, exhibited a naturally healthy and radiant glow, as the pinnacles of her prominent cheek bones displayed faint speckles of freckles. Her satin, blush-coloured lips were full and plump, and shaped perfectly by her pronounced cupid's bow. Marnie had an effortless kind of beauty to her - as even without her usual, heavy cosmetic aesthetic, she still attracted and secured the attention of the foreign, North Carolina boys.
"Payment?" she challenged the boy, arching her natural, dark eyebrows out of pure contest. His brazen demand for something in exchange for a mere half-filled cup of lukewarm, lingering on out of date beer was more than absurd to her. However, Marnie had to continually remind herself that these were North Carolina boys that she was dealing with; they were a whole different breed to the ones she had grown up with on the crime-ridden streets of Brooklyn. Perhaps, parties were simply not for the sake of sweet, teenage rebellion in these sandy plains, maybe they were an organised, profitable event and the boy with the wavy, mahogany locks had simply neglected to inform her of that fact. Her intense, perplexed gaze landed upon John B, who simply shrugged his broad shoulders in a casual display of confusion - neither confirming, nor denying, her theory.
"A kiss for a cup," the shaggy-haired blonde flirtatiously informed her, his sculpted, burly arms folding across his chest in his infamous, nonchalantly cavalier manner. The temptation to roll her sapphire eyes at his arrogant, pompous demeanour was more than abundant; the boy was not a budding, young entrepreneur offsetting his business enterprise early in life, he was merely an arrogant, over-confident teenage boy whose life direction revolved solely around the erratic, hormonal urges of his penis. "Sorry, babe, it's the island rules."
The over-whelming glint of mischief laced itself within the deep, sapphire flecks of Marnie's eyes, as she peered upwards through her thick, voluminous lashes, "just one kiss, hmm?" Her tone was playful, yet aloof, as she leisurely twirled the kinked ends of her cascading, chestnut wisps around the tip of her finger. An ever so slight, angelic pout graced her inviting, peach-toned lips as her head cocked innocently to the side, awaiting confirmation from the still nameless boy with the tousled, dirty blonde hair. He nodded his head assuredly - a slither of him astounded that his crass, amorous advances hadn't been met with pure, resentful outrage, as those he had previously accosted had reacted with.
Marnie took a small, confident step closer to John B. Her delicate, gentle palms placed either side of his elegantly sculpted cheeks, holding him in place, as the battered heels of her dirt-covered Converse rose up from the coarse particles beneath her. As the whimsical girl angled her makeup-less face upwards - her luscious, gloss-coated lips brushed against John B's. She was almost instantaneously met with the all too familiar taste of Keystone Light; the combined malt and bitter tang had temporarily stained his soft, welcoming lips. His large, paw-like hand held her at the nape of her neck - his touch light and placid - as he eased into the impassioned synchronisation. A low, lascivious grunt caught in the depths of his throat as her front, pearly teeth sank tauntingly into the swollen flesh of his bottom lip, lightly nibbling the delicate skin. She proceeded to drag her teasing, salacious tongue along the length of his lip, tenderly caressing the light indents. His gentle lips parted in submission, allowing her tormenting tongue to entangle itself with his own in an abruptly ardent embrace.
"Who's rolling out the welcome wagon now?" John B's low, husky voice chuckled as his lips retreated cautiously from Marnie's. Releasing the petite, bodacious brunette from his gentle hold, a smug, haughty smirk upturned the corners of his beer-laced, gloss-stained lips. His dark, untamed eyebrows raised in an arrogantly, quizzical manner as he waited patiently upon a response from the loud-mouthed, quick-witted girl before him.
"Still you, John B," Marnie quipped back instantly - complacent smirk etching itself into the doll-like features of her freckled complexion, "you've thrown me a welcome party and everything. You've really outdone yourself as well, although I would reconsider on who you hire for service - it seems as though he likes to take advantage of the guest of honour."
"You're trouble, you, aren't you?" the dark-haired boy anticipated with an amused chortle, pulling a singular red cup from the crumpled, plastic packaging laying atop the ivory sand. As if it came as second nature to him, John B applied the slightest touch of pressure to the keg tap, filling the cliché party cup with the golden, bitter beverage. The stream of beer flowed at a steady pace, hitting the side of the cup at an approximately forty five degree angle - to leave as little head as possible on the bordering stale lager.
"I resent the word trouble." Marnie took the disposable cup from the olive-skinned boy, his robust, athletic figure towering above her petite frame. Taking a generous sip of the cheap, college-grade beer, her doe-like, cerulean eyes peered atop the plastic rim. "You've got a little lip gloss on your mouth," she stated, the minor echoes of a giggle evident in the inflections of her lighthearted tone. Casually, she reached her dainty hand upwards, gently wiping away the remnants of her bubblegum-tinted gloss with a tender slide of her thumb.
"What, it didn't suit me?" John B countered banteringly - his bushy, untamed eyebrows raising upwards in an impudently brazen manner. His admirably chiselled arms crossed over his almost-bare, toned chest, shielding his loosely buttoned, pattern-printed shirt from flapping in the mild breeze. As the early-summer night had progressed, the once unbearable temperature had began to decrease significantly, and the occasional gust of wind had picked up into a steady, comfortable flurry.
"Nah, wasn't your colour," she divulged teasingly, taking another lavish gulp of her somewhat refreshing, alcoholic beverage, "it didn't complement your eyes and it definitely clashed with that hideous shirt you're wearing." Perhaps her caustically facetious words were a sliver too brazen for just their second interaction, although the thoroughly entertained grin which danced across his sun-soaked features indicated that John B hadn't taken her playful words to heart.
"Come on now, trouble, I can pull off any col-"
"What do you think you're doing macking on my girl, Routledge?" the roaring, irate voice of notorious posh boy, Rafe Cameron, crudely interrupted the boy mid sentence; it had become somewhat of a recurring theme throughout the evening. The older, less-athletically built boy proceeded to wade his way through the gathering of parched party-goers - his accompanying posse of fellow mindless, well-off minions following in close proximity behind. His work-shy hands were balled into tight, heavy fists, clenched in anticipation of the brawl that he inevitably expected to result from their heated exchange.
"Your girl?" the blonde-haired boy, adorning the discoloured muscle tee, antagonised the situation - his derisive words and coarse, mocking tone only provoking the enraged Cameron boy further, "didn't look like she was your girl when she was all up on my boy, John B just now."
"Was he talking to you, trailer trash?" one of Rafe's carbon-copy puppets hollered from the safety of several feet away. The shorter, feistier blonde stepped forward, his jaw clenched and his already-bruised fists clamped in preparation of the imminent altercation. Aware of his friend's lengthy, complicated history with the law, John B outstretched the palm of his large hand - serving as a makeshift barrier between the two cockfighting blondes, and silently urging his already probation-sentenced friend to fall back. This seemed to appease the short-statured boy for now as he retreated back a few reluctant steps, loosening his jaw.
"So what if I was macking on your girl, what are you going to do about it?" John B confronted the furious Figure Eight toff, taunting him further with his jesting, sarcasm-laced tone as he advanced forward, "are you going to throw daddy's money at me, like you do with all your other problems?" The umber-eyed boy with the dark, wayward waves had struck a nerve with Rafe Cameron; the snide, sneering words hurled towards him had rattled the trust-funded socialite - his scrawny, lacklustre body brimming with unprecedented rage. Acting on pure, neanderthal instinct, he swung his clenched fist towards John B, his garish, white knuckles grazing against the tanned highs of his cheek bone. John B stumbled backwards as the force of Rafe's tensed, curled-up fist connected with his face.
"Woah, back off, Donald Trump Jr," Marnie brazenly injected herself into the brawl; she shoved Rafe with as much strength and capability that her dainty, diminutive figure could muster, aiming to put as much distance between the two scuffling boys as possible. Her venomous tongue spat it's infamous poison in disapproval of the affluent blonde and his barbaric actions - utter disgust conspicuous within her harsh, reprimanding voice. She stared upwards at him, her unsympathetic, indigo eyes burning into his roseate features as she awaited his next move with hitched and bated breath.
"Stay out of this, bitch," Rafe hissed at the capricious brunette, lacking any fragments of hesitation as he returned the shove - only harder. The disposable, plastic cup that Marnie had remained in possession of crumpled under the sheer force of the repugnant Cameron boy's vigor, carelessly spilling it's alcoholic contents over her cropped, cream top. Although it was uncomfortable and tacky against her fair skin, her beer-doused garments were not the primary source of her superlative fury; Marnie Sinclaire absolutely despised, detested and resented the word bitch - especially when used as a derogatory slander to defame a woman. In Marnie's eyes, it was the most degrading slur of them all, and nothing boiled her blood quite like it.
In retaliation to his vulgar turn of phrase, the infuriated Brooklyn-born vixen found herself unconsciously launching her contracted fist at Rafe - knocking him backwards as her dainty knuckles connected with his crooked, concave nose, "who's the bitch now, bitch?" Her sour, sardonic words rang through his ears like the blaring chimes of the island's church bell, as his flaring temper toppled over at the brim. Raising his clenched fist once again, he directed his rage-filled, balled-up hand towards Marnie.
"I don't think so, man," the shorter, blonde-haired boy who had previously accosted the dark-haired girl, grabbed onto the ironed collar of Rafe's Ralph Lauren polo shirt before he could lay a hand on her. He negligently yanked the obnoxiously hostile Cameron boy from Marnie's vicinity, proceeding to thrust his gaunt, bony carcass towards the two witless clones that swarmed around the abhorrent boy. A bitter, hateful glare contorted his fair features as he remained on guard, willing and ready to pounce on the occasion that round two would commence with the feisty, short-statured boy adorning the beer-stained muscle tee.
"This isn't over, Routledge, Maybank," Rafe Cameron spat viciously, addressing the two South side boys directly - before wiping the meandering trail of blood leaking from his quickly bruising nose. Accepting his defeat for the moment, the embarrassed boy retreated back to the safety of the Figure Eight neighbourhood to tend to both his physical and metaphorical wounds, his agitated grumbles growing quieter as he disappeared into the unkempt foliage.
"Can someone get me some ice?" the lager-soaked brunette requested, a tinge of concern unmistakable in her distressed voice. Her luminous, cobalt orbs glanced towards the quick-tempered blonde and the anxious, dark-skinned boy who had appeared beside him now that the looming threat of violence had subdued - hoping one or the other would make an offer.
"I'll be fine," John B dismissed her with a simple, lackadaisical wave of his hand, "Rafe can't throw punches for shit."
"No, you moron, not for your face, for my hand. That fucking hurt."
Taglist: @drewsephsmiles​ @spilledtee​ @bellaguarneri​ @outrbanks​ @ilovejjmaybank​ @milamaybank​ @jjtheangel​ @shawnssongs​ @jayjaymaebank​ @jjouterbanks​ @ptersparkers​ @jjcultmain​ @summerintheobx​ @captainpogue​ @rudyypankow​ @rudypankow-whore​ @ilikealotofpeople-younotsomuch​ @anonymous0writer​ @danandphilfan6​ 
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thehungryplaice · 4 years ago
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Go Back To The 80s With The Hungry Plaice....
https://www.the-hungryplaice.uk/go-back-to-the-80s-at-your-event
The 80s....What a Decade! I don't mind admitting we are big 80s lovers at The Hungry Plaice, it was the decade of our childhood filled with cheese and the start of the video game revolution and if we could go back in time that's where you would find us, I would love to go back to experience the feelings of being back there but with alot more appreciation for what we had as we didn't have a clue back then how fab that time was. There are loads of 80s revivals around, 80s pop stars relaunching their careers and touring again and TV shows picking up on the 80s themes. We love our 80s vans so much that we currently have two these are our Vintage Fish and Chip Vans Betty and Beryl, we try not to look around and see if there are any more for sale as we would be quite happy to fill up our driveway with more of these beauties!
The 80s was filled with fun, fun and loads more fun from the Neon leggings we all wore to the Arcades full of cool games that we used to play, things back then just seemed so much easier and we were still in the days when it was safe for us kids to be playing out all day without our parents knowing where we were rather than being stuck in your bedroom glued to a game, we enjoyed fresh air and freedom and as long as we were back for tea our parents didn't worry about us. We didn't have rules like we do nowadays, Health and Safety was in it's infancy and as kids we could do pretty much what we wanted, we had metal bars we would swing on in the playground at school with huge concrete stepping stones you'd jump across, I got a scar from banging my nose on one of those in my Primary School and I still think it was character building. At home we had a metal framed bunk bed I'm sure was from MFI, there was a metal netted bottom that the mattress sat on top of, I always used to get my hair tangled up in that and I'm sure I've probably got bald patches from where I had to be cut out to be freed. We had a pampas greenish coloured bathroom set in my childhood home which would be considered Vintage today and lots of brown 80s things around the house like pull down coiled lights in the ceilings. My parents were delighted when they had the chance to put an eye level oven in the kitchen and ditch the freestanding gas oven where you had the grill at the top and try to burn your hands when you were cooking your fish fingers, we did have a microwave at some point and that lead to a rebellion on proper cooking! I remember using libraries alot when I was younger, it was a treat going and picking out books you could take away home, there was a limit to the number that you could have and you had to be careful not to get a fine for taking it back late. Information had to be researched and you couldn't do that from the comfort of home, for school I had to go there to find books on certain subjects and I remember being fascinated when having to use those terminals to look at old newspapers. The music was so much better back then, there was a happiness to songs that just made you want to dance not full of rude words and sexual references like today, we had an array of one hit wonders and big massive stars like Madonna and Kylie, Duran Duran and Wham! The songs still get played today but they sound more superior as we no longer listen to them on cassette tapes.
Cassette Tapes.....they were the days, I forgot how you had to rewind them to the beginning to get to the start and you could use a pencil if the tape pulled out and how there are pauses between songs and of course whilst you can try to to rewind and forward wind you'll never find the start of a song, we are spoilt now that we can do that just by pressing a button. The most embarrassing bit was when I asked my husband if something was wrong with the tape as the pause was going on just a bit too long....he gently reminded me that it was the end of the tape and it needed to be turned over haha!! Of course we all had those high tech Pre MP3/IPod/CD Players to play our music with a set of headphones with the fuzzy ears, my brother had one of the early Sony Walkmans and never let me even see it, I bet that's worth something these days I bought a cheap one off Ebay recently I couldn't help myself! Toys were actual toys there were a few electronic ones around such as Speak & Spell or a talking doll where you had a pull a bit of string and it only said about three words, we really actually played with physical things I had Sindy and some Barbie Dolls in fact I had so much of it I'd carry it all in one of those old large blue plastic shopping bags funny there were sold by Tesco to put into your trolley when they introduced self scanning it seems the technology died a death all those years ago but it now all the range. My brothers had Action Men and loads of model cars, we had a huge floor mat that had map on it with roads and a town that you would drive your model cars around all day on. There were Garbage Pail Kids, Care Bears, Rubix Cubes Train Sets and Scaletrix and as we were a bit more money savvy in those days you'd only get something for your birthday and Christmas not just because your parents wanted you to be quiet!
TV Back in the 80s
When we wanted to watch something on TV we only had a few channels I remember the time before Channel 5 and we had one huge Brown TV in the Lounge where you had to press the buttons on the front to change the channel, I reckon you would have needed a forklift to move the damn thing it was so huge and took up half the room. Days were filled with whatever my parents wanted to watch, there was Rainbow and Playschool when I was little, I remember watching the very first episode of Eastenders (a bad TV habit I dropped a few years ago), programmes were quite limited back then but it wasn't a huge deal because we entertained ourselves as kids, sometimes watching a Film would be a big treat and made special times like Christmas were more exciting sitting down together as a family and watching a film just released on TV that we had never seen before. We didn't mind adverts if we were watching ITV or Channel4 they didn't drag on like you get these days.
I don't remember exactly when Video Recorders came on the market but I know there were Betamax and VHS, we had VHS machine, you could record programmes off the TV and playback at your leisure and you always knew someone who was copying VHS to VHS that would sell you some films. I still used VHS tapes when my daughter was little so they were around all the time I was growing up. Buying a VHS tape was a real treat, you might have been lucky enough to have seen a film in the cinema but there was always a really big delay until they were released on Video or so it seemed. Of course for a really special treat you would go Blockbusters to rent a video but they were quite strict if you forgot your video card I guess computer systems weren't able to let you confirm any of your account details you had!
80s Fashion
Then there was the fashion in the 80s.....wow it was great and brilliant all neon neon neon and bright colours, I had one of those multi coloured white and purple shellsuits and Hi-Tec Trainers. There were punk hairstyles and coloured dyed hair and clothes that didn't match, famous stars created looks from throwing clothes together like Madonna and Boy George. Colours like pink, yellow and blue where everywhere, we had shoulder pads and polka dots, tracksuits and fitness gear, an explosion of trainers and dungarees. There are brands that have come back into fashion nowadays like Kappa and Champion, I wish to god I had kept them all to have them now! We would shop in the local high street and independent fashion shops, I lived in London and would go markets at the weekend, Wembley market was a huge favourite. We had BHS and C&A and a shop called Madhouse in the High Street at the top of the road, I don't really remember when the supermarkets starting selling clothes and the rise of the bigger fashion names back then we were quite limited to only a few shops. I have to mention Woolworths of course, we had one in our high street and I would enjoy just walking around looking at the everything they had including the glorious pick and mix!
Rumbelows.... I remember when you wanted something electrical you could shop at Currys and Comet and even Rumbelows, you always had to go out to buy something and bigger electrical items were never in stock and always had to be ordered and delivered weeks later, we really don't know how lucky we are to have the internet and the ability to order online it saves so much time and give us the freedom of choice to buy from so many different places. Of course the reason we couldn't buy online was because we didn't have the internet in our homes, no mobile phones, I got my first when I was 18 and had to ask permission to call anyone from the house phone, if you wanted to meet your friends you had to arrange it all before you went out and you couldn't check if they were on their way to see you unless you have 10p and phone box nearby. You were lucky if you had a Games Console let alone a Computer....
Gaming in the 80s, well what can I say it put gaming on the map and if it wasn't for those early days I doubt the gaming industry would be what it is today. We had a Spectrum Sinclair 48k first, I'm not even sure what a 48k would be today in terms of processing or storage even a single Word document can be bigger than that. It was bought as a shared present in the family one Christmas and I rarely got to play on it. All I remember is that we had a small black and white TV that we would connect to the computer and you'd have a cassette player connected to, for the Sinclair 128k we had later on I know there was a cassette player connected to the right hand side of the keyboard. Anyway you'd press play and then hear this whizzing buzzing noise whilst the game was loading and the TV would go all fuzzy, sometimes it would take ages and if you had a copy your mate recorded it might not load properly, talk about building your anticipation and then letting you down! The games we had included Daley Thompson, Hungry Horace and Jet Set Willy, I've seen the Spectrum emulator and its a great reminder of the games we had in the days gone by, they now download in seconds....just think what we could have done with all that time we sat staring at a screeching cassette tape player waiting for games to load. We would use the keyboard to play or a joystick if that sort of thing was sold with the Computer you had and your parents could afford one, it was quite easy....left, right, up, down and fire. Us kids would normally have one type of computer, ours was the Spectrum and I know someone on our road had the Commodore and I think there was a Binatone in someone's house, you were royalty if you were lucky enough to have more than one Computer. Handhelds were around then like the Game and Watch ones I don't remember all the different ones they made there were so many sold, we had an early Donkey Kong split screen it was orange on the casing of course I hardly got to play that either, the newer generation of Gaming Consoles like the Sega Megadrive was a big surprise to us kids that you could just put your game in and not long after be playing your game how did that happen! We also had the launch of the Nintendo Gameboy at the end of the decade which changed our gaming lives forever! Another side of gaming that you don't really see today was the Arcades, they were places you hung out with your mates for hours and hours playing Street Fighter and Pac Man, we had a shop on the high street which only had one or two I think it might have been a cafe, when you scored a high score you'd put your three initials in, arcades are mostly for the seaside holidays today full of the boring 2p push machines and fruities, as we know the game industry moved from those high street arcades to bedrooms.... So next time you complain about having to wait whilst you're downloading that highly sophisticated game with the controller I would need a degree to understand how to use think about us kids and our gaming....!
The 80s....wow what a decade
what a time, full of colour, lights and fun, I do wish I could get in a time machine and go back there and have some fun but I know we will never go back to those easy days we will keep moving forwards so instead I'll enjoy our road trips in the vans with the crackling radios....
https://www.the-hungryplaice.uk/go-back-to-the-80s-at-your-event
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tasksweekly · 6 years ago
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[TASK 151: JAMAICA]
In celebration of Caribbean American Heritage Month, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 1,170+ Jamaican faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK -  examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Cleo Laine (1927) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress and singer.
Mona Hammond (1934) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Possibly Other / Chinese] - actress.
Joan Hooley (1936) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Leonie Forbes (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actress, broadcaster, and producer.
Martine Beswick (1941) Jamaican [Portuguese / British] - actress and model.
Carole Crawford (1943) Afro-Jamaican - model. 
Cynthia Richards (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Rita Marley (1946) Cuban [Afro-Jamaican] - singer.
Millie Small (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Beryl Cunningham (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Esther Anderson (1946) Jamaican - actress, filmmaker, and photographer.
Marcia Barrett (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Beverley Kelso (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Audrey Hall (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Grace Jones (1948) Afro-Jamaican, as well as 1/16th Scottish - model, singer and actress.
Marcia Griffiths (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eleanor Alberga (1949) Afro-Jamaican - composer.
Fae Ellington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - media personality and lecturer.
Susan Cadogan (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lillian Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician and writer. 
Liz Mitchell (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Dawn Penn (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Judy Mowatt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Patsy Yuen (1952) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - model, fashion designer, and Miss Jamaica World 1973.
Claudja Barry (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress. 
Lorna Bennett (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Marcia Hines (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, and tv personality.
Adrienne Banfield-Jones (1953) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - tv personality.
Doña Croll (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Carlene Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Samantha Rose (1954) Jamaican - singer. 
Rosanne Katon (1954) Jamaican / Unknown - model, actress, and comedian.
Shari Belafonte (1954) Afro-Jamaican, Dutch Jewish, Irish, Scottish / African-American - actress, model, writer and singer. 
Sandy Daley (1954) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Cindy Breakspeare (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, English] / British - singer and model.
Sandi Bogle / Sandy Channer (1954) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - tv personality.
Jacqui Gordon-Lawrence (1956) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Sheila Hylton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sheryl Lee Ralph (1956) African-American, Afro-Jamaican [including Cameroonian] - actress and singer. 
Jaki Graham / Jacqueline Graham (1956) Jamaican [including Nigerian] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Marcia Aitken (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sharon Forrester (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Precious Wilson (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ruby Turner (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Suzanne Packer (1958) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - actress.
Janet Kay (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tonya Williams (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
J.C. Lodge / June Carol Lodge, (1958) Jamaican - singer, actress and artist. 
Barbara Eve Harris (1959) Trinidadian [Afro-Jamaican] - actress. 
Sister Carol / Carol Theresa East (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Gail Vaz-Oxlade (1959) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Possibly Other] - tv personality and writer.
Carroll Thompson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer, bassist, and pianist.
Camille Turner (1960)Afro-Jamaican = performance artist, curator, and educator.
Lonny Chin (1960) Jamaican, Chinese, Welsh, Swedish - actress and model.
Marla Glen (1960) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - singer. 
Buntricia Bastian (1960) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist. 
Diane Louise Jordan / Diane Johnson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter and radio presenter.
Gina Belafonte (1961) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 5/8 Jewish [Dutch Jewish, Russian Jewish, Sephardi Jewish], 1/16 Irish, 1/16 Scottish- actress and producer.
Venice Kong (1991) Jamaican [Chinese] - model and actress. 
Pauline Henry (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kim Appleby (1961) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and singer-songwriter.
Tracy Spencer (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer.
Sister Nancy / Ophlin Russell (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Downtown Julie Brown / Julie Brown (1963) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress, tv personality, DJ, and VJ.
Caron Wheeler (1963) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
Sharon Marley (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, percussionist, dancer, and curator.
Gloria Reuben (1964) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican (including Cameroonian, Ghanaian, Ivorian, Malian, Nigerian), Ashkenazi Jewish, Sephardi Jewish, likely some English] - actress, singer, and producer.
Sophia George (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Angie Le Mar (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actress, tv presenter, comedian, producer, director, and writer.
Gigi Hamilton (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Kate Langbroek (1965) Jamaican, Jewish / Dutch - tv presenter, comedian, and radio presenter.
Doris Pearson (1966) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer, dancer, and choreographer.
Michelle Hurd (1966) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish, German - actress. 
Pepa / Sandra Denton (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress. 
Lorraine Pearson (1967) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Tania Evans (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Jeanette von der Burg / Jeanette Söderholm (1967) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
Skin / Deborah Ann Dyer (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and model.
Cedella Marley (1967) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actress, singer-songwriter, dancer, fashion designer, and author.
Kay Purcell (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lady G / Janice Fyffe (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ. 
Karyn Bryant (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress, writer, and television personality.
Nadine Sutherland (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Lisa Shaw (1968) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Robinson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Denise Pearson (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexia Gardner (1968 or 1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Sardia Robinson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, writer, and producer.
Saskia Garel (1969) Jamaican [Chinese / Spanish] - actress and singer-songwriter.
Roxanne Beckford / Roxanne Beckford-Hoge (1969) Afri-Jamaican - actress.
Michaela Pereira (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Nigerian, Taino, Irish, Unspecified Other] / European - television personality.
Michie Mee / Michelle McCullock Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actress. 
Yanna McIntosh (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Audrey Reid (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Deni Hines / Dohnyale Hines (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Ethiopian, Somali - singer.
Jaya / María Kagahastian-Gotidoc (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Visayan Filipina, Spanish / Filipina - actress, singer, rapper, tv host, dancer, and producer.
Diana King (1970) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Monie Love / Simone Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and radio personality.
Naomi Campbell (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, model, and businesswoman.
Kathryne Dora Brown (1971) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English, Scottish, German - actress. 
Jada Pinkett Smith (1971) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian / African-American - actress, singer-songwriter, comedian, and businesswoman.
Karin Taylor (1971) Jamaican, Brazilian, Chinese - model and blogger.
Charmaine Sinclair (1971) Indo-Jamaican - porn actress and model.
Billie Myers (1971) Afro-Jamaican / British - singer-songwriter.
Vernie Bennett / Vernett Bennett (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natasha Williams (1971) Jamaican - actress.
Patra / Dorothy Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Salena Godden (1972) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, Scottish, English - musician, performer, poet, and author.
Selena Griffin (1972) Unspecified Native American, Jamaican, Cuban, African-American - actress. 
Lady Saw / Marion Hall (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lorraine Pascale (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Georgianna Robertson (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Scottish] - model and actress. 
Easther Bennett (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rachel Stuart (1972) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress and television personality.
Lisa Moorish (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish, Unspecified Asian] / English - singer-songwriter.
Staceyann Chin (1972) Afro-Jamaican. Chinese-Jamaican  - spoken-word poet and performing artist.
Misa Hylton-Brim (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Japanese / African-American - fashion designer and stylist. 
Beenie Man / Anthony Moses Davis (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Macka Diamond (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nadia Brown (1973) Afro-Jamaican - poet, writer, and author.
Beverley Knight (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, tv presenter, and producer.
Tanya Stephens (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stacey McKenzie (1973) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Scottish - model and television personality.
Elizabeth Llewellyn (1973 or 1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Carlene Smith (1973) Afro-Jamaican - dancer. 
Elle Downs (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Amber Katori Wilson (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Chevelle Franklyn (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Karen Chin (1974) Jamaican - DJ.
Christine Adams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Brenda Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actress and tv personality.
Robinne Lee (1974) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, British] - actress and author.
Divine Brown (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Skye Edwards (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Zadie Smith (1975) Afro-Jamaican / English - novelist. 
Queen Ifrica / Ventrice Morgan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Shaznay Lewis (1975) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - actress and singer-songwriter. 
Lisa Hanna (1975) Afro-Jamaican - Miss World 1993.
Ce'cile / Cecile Claudine Charlton (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Sharon Duncan-Brewster (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Naomie Harris (1976) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress.
Denise Nurse (1976) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Marsha Thomason (1976) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Charlotte / Charlotte Kelly (1976 or 1977) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, keyboardist, guitarist, and producer.
d'bi Young (1977) Afro-Jamaican - dub poet and activist.
Oluniké Adeliyi (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Yoruba Nigerian - actress.
Kerry Washington (1977) African-American, Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, as well as some English, Scottish, Unspecified Native American] - actress. 
Camille McDonald (1977) Afro-Jamaican - model and television personality. 
Michelle Buteau (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, French] / Haitian [Afro-Haitian, Lebanese] - actress, comedian, and podcast host.
Jully Black / Jullyann Gordon (1977) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - actress, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Nyanda / Nyanda Thorbourne (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
Foxy Brown  / Jennifer Esmerelda Hylton (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Alesha Dixon (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer. 
Gwendolyn Osborne (1978) Afro-Jamaican / British - actress and model.
Alaine Laughton (1978) Jamaican [Taino, Afro-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter.
Nicole Lyn (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican / Chinese, English] - actress.
Mamadee / Mamadie Wappler (1979) Sierra Leonean, Jamaican / German - singer-songwriter.
YayaBeatsFace (1979) Afro-Jamaican - makeup artist. 
Terri Walker / Chanelle Gstettenbauer (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Lisa Maffia (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, English - singer-songwriter, rapper, model, tv presenter, and fashion designer.
Judi Love (1980) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and radio presenter.
Sabrina Colie (1980) Jamaican [Indo-Jamaican / Afro-Jamaican, Scottish] - actress and director.
Nahtasha Budhi (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Daisi Pollard (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model, beauty queen, businesswoman, author, and actress.
Daenya McDonald (1980) Afro-Jamaican - actress and model.
Melina Matsoukas (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Cuban / Greek Jewish, Polish Jewish - director. 
Jamelia / Jamelia Niela Davis (1981) Jamaican / Zimbabwean - singer, tv presenter and actress. 
Susan Kelechi Watson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Nadirah X / Nadirah Sabreen Seid (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Carla Campbell (1980) Afro-Jamaican - model. 
Nordia Coco Witter (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Kimberly Megan (1981) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Shanna Malcolm (1981) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Olivia / Olivia Theresa Longott (1981) Jamaican, Indian, Cuban, Unspecified Native American - singer. 
Ms. Dynamite / Niomi McLean-Daley (1981) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
YolanDa Brown (1982) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, saxophonist, and composer.
Kristin Kreuk (1982) Jamaican [Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, Scottish], Chinese, Indonesian / Dutch - actress and producer.
Chrisette Michele (1982) Afro-Jamaican, Unknown - singer.
Spice / Grace Latoya Hamilton (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaye Jacobs / Emma Jaye Jacobs (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ebony Bones (1982) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, model, and producer.
Kerron Ennis (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Irie Love (1982) Hawaiian, Jamaican, Dutch, English, Unspecified Native American - singer. 
Selita Ebanks (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Caymanian - model and actress. 
Trey Anthony (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress, comedian, producer, and playwright.
Layla Flaherty (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actress, model, and tv personality.
Vinessa Antoine (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Nyla Thorbourne (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nyla / Nailah Thorbourne (1983) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, English] / African-American - singer-songwriter.
VV Brown / Vanessa Brown (1983) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer-songwriter, model, pianist, guitarist, percussionist, and producer.
Speech Debelle / Corynne Elliot (1983) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Kendra Westwood (1984) Jamaican / Grenadian - actress. 
Donisha Rita Claire Prendergast (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Unspecified - actress, model, dancer, filmmaker, and poet.
Cherine Anderson (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actress. 
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Vanessa Veasley (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Louisiana Creole, Irish, Spanish - model. 
Keisha Buchanan (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Etana / Shauna McKenzie (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Camille Davis (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Ika Wong (1984) Jamaican [Chinese, Unspecified White, Unspecified Black / Unknown]  - reality star.
Sakina Deer (1984) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Tami Chynn / Tammar Chin (1984) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Jamie Gunns (1985) Indo-Jamaican / English - model.
Kreesha Turner (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese-Jamaican / Scottish, German-Canadian - singer. 
Fefe Dobson (1985) Jamaican / Unspecified Indigenous Canadian, Irish, English, Dutch - singer.
Charlene-Vanessa Draytón (1985) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - actress. 
Amanda Brown (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer. 
Keyshia Ka'oir (1985) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Mia Isabella (1985) Jamaican, Puerto Rican, French - porn actress - Trans!
Tessanne Chin (1985) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Jewish, Possibly Other] / Jamaican [Chinese], Cherokee - singer-songwriter and guitarist.
Lyric Rochester (1985) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Nicole Beharie (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress and singer. 
Yendi Phillips (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - model, tv host, Miss Jamaica Universe 2010, and Miss Jamaica World 2007.
Zahra Redwood (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2007.
Andrea Lewis (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actress and singer. 
Chantal Raymond (1985) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica World 2010.
Antonia Thomas (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English, possibly Welsh - actress.
Laura Mvula (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Kittian - singer. 
Adi Alfa (1986) Nigerian / Jamaican, Chinese, British - actress.
Rebecca Ferguson (1986) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Rebecca Silvera (1986) Afro-Jamaican - reality star. 
Annaliese Dayes (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Saint Lucian, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian, Afro-Vincentian - model, television personality, and presenter.
Dominique Moore (1986) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Raine Seville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Nerissa Irving (1986) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Chrystina Sayers (1986) Afo-Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, African-American, Irish - musician. 
Ishawna (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tracy Z. Francis (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Mexican - actress. 
Arabella Ruby (1987) Afro-Jamaican, British / White American - actress. 
Lashana Lynch (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Sharmila Makeda (1987) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Guyanese - actress. 
Zaraah Abrahams (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian, Iraqi - actress.
Cleopatra Coleman (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, possibly other - actress. 
Sandy Green (1987) Jamaican - singer-songwriter and keyboardist.
Rox / Roxanne Tataei (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Iranian - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and keyboardist.
Angel Nelly (1988) Jamaican - dancer. 
Margot Bingham (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Russian Jewish, German Jewish - actress. 
Jade Ewen (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish, Italian [including Sicilian] - actress and singer. 
Gillain Berry (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Aruban - model and Miss Aruba 2010.
Leonie Elliott (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Elease Donovan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - reality star. 
Ashleigh Francis (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - model and Miss World Australia 2010.
Karla Crome (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress. 
Alexandra Burke (1988) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican, Irish - singer.
Natalie Duncan (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Greek, English - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Annastasia Baker (1988) Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Danielle Rickards (1988) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Chantal Zaky (1988) Jamaican [British, Canadian, Portuguese] / Egyptian - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2012.
FKA Twigs / Tahliah Debrett Barnett-Smith (1988) Afro-Jamaican / English, Spanish - singer and dancer. 
Alisha Wainwright (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Haitian - actress.
Anita Antoinette (1989) Afro-Haitian - singer.
Rochelle Humes (1989) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and television presenter. 
Yrsa Daley-Ward (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Nigerian - actress, model, and writer.
Lianne La Havas (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Greek - singer. 
Lesa-Gayle Wee Tom (1989) Afro-Jamaican - beauty queen and reality star.
Aluna Francis (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Tanzanian, Indian - singer. 
Barbee / Faith J Eselebor (1989) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Steph Fearon / Stephanie Fearon (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - actress.
Ayesha Curry (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] / African-American, Polish - actress, tv personality, celebrity cook, and author.
Kamille / Camille Purcell (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - singer-songwriter and producer.
Brittany Lyons (1989) Jamaican [Unspecified White, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica World 2008.
Gaye McDonald (1989) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dhq Sher (1990) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Alyssa Veniece (1990) Jamaican [Chinese, German, Portugese, Indian, French] - actress.
Jourdan Dunn (1990) 7/8 Afro-Grenadian, 1/16 Afro-Jamaican, 1/16 Syrian - model. 
April Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - model, reality tv star, and Miss Jamaica Universe 2008.
Delilah / Paloma Ayana Stoecker (1990) Nigerian, Jamaican, Cuban, English / Spanish, French - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Jade Anouka (1990) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Trinidadian - actress and poet.
Elle Royal / Danielle Prendergast (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jenaae Jackson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Earth Jamaica 2009.
Ciarra Nevitt (1990) English, Jamaican, St. Lucian - actress. 
Sharlene Rädlein (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, German, Possibly Other] - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2015.
Zita Hanrot (1990) Afro-Jamaican / French - actress.
Danielle Nicole (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
HoodCelebrityy / Tina Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Jade Thompson (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English - model. 
Jessie Morrison (1991) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Bella Blair (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kaci Fennell (1992) Afro-Jamaican - host, model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2014.
Junglepussy / Shayna McHayle (1991) Jamaican / Trinidadian - rapper and actress. 
Stefflon Don / Stephanie Allen (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Tori Kelly (1992) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican / Irish, German - singer and actress.
Latty / slickchic_latty (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Young M.A / Katorah Marrero (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Puerto Rican - rapper.
Olivia Olson (1992) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - actress and singer. 
Shannon Hamilton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Camille Kostek (1992) Polish, Irish, Jamaican - model and reporter. 
Zaddy / Just On My Chill (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Misha B / Misha Bryan (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Georgina Campbell (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress. 
Kamie Crawford (1992) Jamaican, German, Irish, Cuban, Indian, African-American  - actress, TV host, model and Miss Teen USA 2010.
Petite-Sue Divinitii (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Vivianna Grant (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jessica Plummer (1992) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer and actress. 
Leomie Anderson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model and designer. 
Antoinette Robertson (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Daneille Mattis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Alicia Burke (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Renae McLean (1993) Afro-Jamaican - dancer.
Simona Brown (1993 or 1994) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Ella Mai (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - singer.
Kadesha Porter (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Christina Nelson (1994) Jamaican - dancer.
Winnie Harlow (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model. 
Shay Cherise (1994) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Tamara Lawrance (1994) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress.
Ella Eyre (1994) Afro-Jamaican / Maltese - singer. 
Adrienne Show (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Tibby (1995) Afro-Jamaican, Dominican, Indian, Irish - model.
Nay / Nay and Meech (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Tsheca White (1995) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Miss RFabulous (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Zuri Marley (1995) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Ella Balinska (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Polish - actress.
Isabel Dalley (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Universe Jamaica 2016.
Samantha J / Samantha Gonsalves (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese, Sephardi Jewish] - singer-songwriter and model. 
Shanice Allen (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Davina Bennett (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model and Miss Jamaica Universe 2017.
Amira McCarthy (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Irish / Gambian - singer.
Cheyenne Maya Carty (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dionne Bromfield (1996) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter and tv personality.
Hannah Shakespeare (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shenseea / Chinsea Lee (1996) Afro-Jamaican, Korean - singer. 
Jorja Smith (1997) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer. 
Barbra Lee-Grant (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jada Kingdom (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model. 
Shanice Archer (1998) Afro-Jamaican / English - actress. 
Tami Williams (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model. 
Gabz / Gabrielle Gardiner (1998) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and pianist.
Selah Marley (1998) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - model.
Emily Maddison (1999) Afro-Jamaican - Miss Jamaica Universe 2018.
Tia Rolph (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Willow Smith (2000) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress and dancer. 
Koffee / Mikayla Simpson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and guitarist. 
Haile Thomas (2000) Afro-Jamaican - international speaker, youth health activist, vegan food & lifestyle influencer.
Shameika Gordon (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sydney Aitcheson (2000) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Gabriella Laws (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alyssia Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Iris Dubois (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Alaina Tsang (2001) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer. 
Ciara Johnson (2001) Afro-Jamaican - model and blogger.
Zipporah Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Linlyn Lue (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actress.
Michele Austin (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Hamilton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Possibly Other] / Kenyan, Scottish - singer, multi-instrumentalist, and composer.
Zahra Newman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Maureen Okpoko (?) Tuareg Nigerian / Jamaican - actress.
Tanya Muneera Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Natalia Castellanos (?) Jamaican, Surinamese, Venezuelan, Colombian - actress.
Sukina Abdul Noor (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Wilma Reading (?) Afro-Jamaican, Afghan, Torres Strait Islander, Unspecified Aboriginal Australian, Irish, Scottish, English - singer.
Ayanna Witter-Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, cellist, and composer.
Nadine Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer.
Eden Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - instagrammer (edenmarley).
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [Afro Costa Rican / German] - singer.
Sarafine Andres (?) Jamaican, Bahamian, Indian - instagrammer (sarafine_andres).
Pamputtae / Eveanna Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Diane Söderholm (?) Afro-Jamaican / Swedish - singer.
TAP (?) Jamaican, Bahamian - youtuber (instagram: theycallmetap).
Chyna Layne (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress. 
Sheyla Bonnick (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Iman McDonnaugh (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian, Italian, Irish - model.
Michael Hyatt (?) Afro-Jamaican  - actress. 
Samantha Cole (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea-Rachel Parker (?) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish, Unspecified Native American - actress.
Tia Hendricks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Gabrielle Graham (?) Jamaican, Montserratian - actress.
Philicia Saunders (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Kerri McLean (?) Afro-Jamaican / Flemish, Welsh - actress. 
Johanna Thea (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian, Swiss, English - actress and writer. 
Ranking Miss P / Margaret Anderson (?) Afro-Jamaican - radio presenter.
Janeshia Adams-Ginyard (?) Afro-Jamaican - stunt actress.
Jacinth Headlam (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tai Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Andrea Laing (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Whitney White (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Danielle Pinnock (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Jo Martin (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
Sharon Ferguson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Tahirah Sharif (?) Afro-Jamaican / Pakistani - actress.
Suzie McGrath (?) Afro-Jamaican, English - actress.
Rachael Grace (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Lisa Marie Summerscales (?) Jamaican / English - actress. 
Lisagaye Tomlinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Genevieve Capovilla (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actress.
Josanne Hutchinson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, playwright and poet. 
Shaniqua Okwok (?) Jamaican / Ugandan - actress. 
Lisa Mercedez (?) Jamaican - rapper.
Nathalie Merchant (?) Jamaican, Panamanian / Romanian - actress.
Simone Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Maya Nadine (?) Jamaican [Chinese], German - actress. 
Alana Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Toyah Frantzen (?) Cuban, Afro-Jamaican, Dutch - actress, director and writer. 
Arianna D'Amato (?) Afro-Jamaican, Italian - actress. 
Devynity / Devyn Wray (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, spoken word artist, and poet.
Porsche Thomas (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actress. 
Catherine Burrell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Debra Ann Townes (?) Jamaican, Panamanian, African-American, Unspecified Native American  - actress. 
Brittoni Sinclair (?) Jamaican / African-American - actress. 
Yvonne Curtis / Yvonne McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Aleisha Barnett (?) Jamaican [Guyanese, Unknown] - actress. 
Gail Hamilton (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Kristen Graham (?) Jamaican, Chinese - actress and model.  
Maia Watkins (?) Afro-Jamaican / Guyanese, Ukrainian - actress.
Queen Paula (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Renee Mittelstaedt (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actress and model. 
Tymika Tafari (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Nicolette Lynch (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Melissa Suppiah (?) Jamaican, Sri Lankan, Portuguese - actress. 
Nahtoreya Coleman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Shirley Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - violinist and composer.
Noelle Kerr (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Naomi Dela Cruz (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipina - actress. 
Kadian Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Leonie Haynes-Moses (?) Grenadian / Barbadian, Jamaican - actress. 
Simone Michaud  (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress, model coach, singer-songwriter, lyricist, musician, and producer.
Iza Scott (?) Jamaican, Unspecified Native American, Irish, Polish, French - actress. 
Myra McKenzie Merriweather (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Naomi Grossett (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actress. 
Miqueal-Symone Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rosemary Mathurin (?) Jamaican / Saint Lucian - actress.
Annette Brissett (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
The Ra11n / Metis Monroe / Kara Jade (?) Afro-Jamaican / Metis [Plains Cree, Unspecified] - rapper, model, and MC.
Myrna Hague (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Denai Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Christina Knight (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Natalie Storm (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Quanteisha / Quanteisha Benjamin (?) Afro-Jamaican, Indian - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Akira Reid (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Doreen Shaffer / Monica Johnson (?) Jamaican [German / Costa Rican] - musician. 
Llanakila / Victoria Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - artist, painter, digital illustrator, and digital artist.
Polly A. / Meleni Smith (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - singer. 
Tenza (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vashti Clarke (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actress, and entrepreneur.
Dahlia Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
Chantelle Ernandez (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kimberly Huie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress. 
D'Angel / Michelle Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, actress, model, and brand ambassador.
Naki Depass (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Stacy-Ann Gooden (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Beverley Heath Hoyland (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Nicketa Steer (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Natalya Spencer (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Trillary Banks (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - rapper.
Khalia (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Lovena Fox (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kim Roberts (?) Jamaican / Dominican - actress. 
Djanet Sears (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress and director. 
Tasha the Amazon / Tasha Schuman (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ordena Stephens-Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actress.
Dancehall Queen Stacey (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer. 
Mad Michelle (?) Afro-Jamaican - dancer. 
Janica Coralee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (janica_coralee).
Jessica Wong (?) Chinese, Jamaican - Instagrammer (jessleewong).
Joelette (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (estrella.marie).
Amanda (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (mandaaub).
Jeneil Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Dom Collins (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (domalexi).
Shawna-Kay (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: kay_shawnakay)
Racquel Mckenzie (?) Afro-Jamaican - model, actor and dancer (Instagram: kellzbroadway)
Keliah Singh (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: _iamkeliahsingh_)
Shenelle Katina (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (shenellekatina).
Yanique Barrett (?) Afro-Jamaican - tv host, singer and Instagrammer (yaniquecurvydiva).
Melenigma (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (melenigma).
Natosh Renee (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (natoshrenee).
Aiyana A. Lewis (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (aiyanaalewis).
Shevon K. Nieto (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, athlete and Instagrammer (shevonstoddart).
Monica Claire Loshusan  (?) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer (monicaclaire876).
Meshane Kelly (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and Instagrammer (kellymeshane).
Chantaé (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer, model and Instagrammer (tina.channiel).
M:
Harry Belafonte (1927) Afro-Jamaican, Sephardi Jewish / Afro-Jamaican, Irish, Scottish - singer and actor. 
Seaman Dan / Henry Gibson Dan (1929) 3/4 Torres Strait Islander, 1/8 Jamaican, 1/16 Niuean, 1/16 New Caledonian - singer-songwriter.
Alvin "Seeco" Patterson / Francisco Willie (1930) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Dizzy Reece / Alphonso Son Reece (1931) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter.
Ernest Ranglin (1932) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and composer.
Carlos Malcolm (1934) Afro-Jamaican - trombonist, percussionist and bandleader.
Baba Brooks (1935) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet player.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [including Yoruba Nigerian] - singer-songwriter, producer, and inventor.
Scratch / Lee Perry / Rainford Hugh Perry (1936) Afro-Jamaican [Yoruba] - singer and music producer.
Clifton Jones (1937) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lester Sterling / Mr. Versatile (1936) Afro-Jamaican - trumpet and saxophone player.
Kenny Lynch (1938) Afro-Jamaican, British / Barbadian - actor, singer-songwriter, and entertainer.
Derrick Harriott (1939) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Jimmy James (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Winston Jarrett (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Fagan (1940) Afro-Jamaican - choreographer.
Tito Simon / Keith Foster (1940) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer. 
Bunny Lee / Edward O'Sullivan Lee (1941) Afro-Jamaican - record producer.
Bongo Herman / Herman Davis (1941) AfroJamaican -  hand-drummer, percussionist and singer.
Stranger Cole / StrangeJah Cole / Wilburn Theodore Cole (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Carl Douglas (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Phil Pratt (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
U-Roy / Ewart Beckford (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Toots Hibbert / Frederick Nathaniel Hibbert (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dobby Dobson (1942) Afro-Jamaican - singer and record producer. 
Eric "Monty" Morris (1942) Jamaican - musician.
Alvin Ranglin (1942) Jamaican - singer.
Thom Bell (1942) Jamaican - songwriter, arranger, and record producer.
David Madden (1943) Jamaican - musician.
Dandy Livingstone / Robert Livingstone Thompson (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Boris Gardiner (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Ras Michael / Michael George Henry (1943) Jamaican - singer.
Willie Francis (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roydel Johnson / Congo Ashanti Roy (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Peter Straker (1943) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor. 
Anton Phillips (1943) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Bob Andy / Keith Anderson (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Max Romeo (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Kiddus I / Frank Dowding Jr (1944) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
B.B. Seaton / Bibby / Harris Lloyd Seaton (1944) singer and record producer. 
Sydney Crooks / Luddy Pioneer / Norris Cole / Luddy Crooks / Frankie Diamond /
Brother Cole (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dwight Pinkney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist. 
Cornell Campbell (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Ernie Smith (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Denzil Dennis (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
The Mighty Pope / Earle Heedram (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Rupie Edwards (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer. 
Burning Spear / Winston Rodney (1945) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Aston Barrett (1946) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist. 
Tommy Cowan (1946) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer. 
Winston Groovy Winston Tucker (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Ijahman Levi / Trevor Sutherland (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Willard White (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Enos McLeod (1946) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Douglas Ewart (1946) Afro-Jamaican - multi-instrumentalist and instrument builder.
Bunny Wailer / Neville O'Riley Livingston (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Conroy Gedeon (1947) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Barry Biggs (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Jammy / Lloyd James (1947) Afro-Jamaican - dub mixer and record producer. 
Dave Barker (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eric Donaldson (1947) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cedric Myton (1947) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Jesse Green (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Johnny Osbourne (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Winston Francis (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
King Sounds / Roy Livingstone Plummer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Oliver Samuels (1948) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor. 
Lloyd Parks (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Lloyd Lovindeer (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Pablo Moses / Pablo Henry (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ken Boothe (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Herman Chin Loy (1948) Jamaican [Chinese] - musician and producer.
Jimmy Cliff (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer, musician, and actor.
Junior Byles / Kerrie Byles (1948) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garth Dennis (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Roy Cousins (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer, producer and record label owner. 
Big Youth / Manley Augustus Buchanan (1949) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Anthony Sherwood (1949) Afro-Jamaican - actor, producer, director and writer.
Gil Scott-Heron (1949) Afro-Jamaican, African-American - poet and musician. 
Tony Ray (1949) Jamaican [Jewish] - singer, bassist, and drummer.
Jimmy London (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Leroy Sibbles (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Pat Kelly (1949) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Junior Marvin / Donald Hanson Marvin Kerr Richards Jr (1949) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and singer. 
Philip Akin (1950) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Pablove Black (1950) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Watty Burnett (1950) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Flabba / Errol Holt (1950) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist. 
Paul Douglas (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Leroy Wallace (1950) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Peter Ashbourne (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician and composer.
Pluto Shervington (1950) Afro-Jamaican - musician, singer, engineer and producer.
Carl Lumbly (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Robbie Lyn (1951) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Junior English (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Horace Andy (1951) Afro-Jamaican - songwriter and singer.
Constantine "Vision" Walker (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Lynval Golding (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Errol Dunkley (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Basil Wallace (1951) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Clinton Fearon (1951) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.  
Niney the Observer / George Boswell (1951) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Bruce Ruffin (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Clive Hunt (1952) Afro-Jamaican - musician, arranger, composer and producer. 
Don Carlos (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.  
Admiral Bailey (1952) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Dr Alimantado / Winston James Thompson (1952) Afro-Jamaican -  singer, DJ, and producer.
Keith Sterling (1952) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Mutabaruka / Allan Hope (1952) Afro-Jamaican - poet, musician, actor, educator, and talk-show host.
Leroy Smart (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer. 
Sly Dunbar (1952) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Delroy Lindo (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director. 
Carl Malcolm (1952) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Ronny Cush (1952) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Dillinger / Lester Bullock (1953) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Robert Wisdom (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Santa Davis / Carlton "Santa" Davis (1953) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Al Campbell (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
David Jahson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Everton Blender (1954) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Robbie Shakespeare (1953) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and record producer.
Clive Chin (1954) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - musician and producer.
Trinity / Junior Brammer (1954) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer. 
Linval Thompson (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer. 
Mikey Chung (1954) Jamaican [Chinese] - keyboard, guitar and percussion player, arranger and record producer.
Gussie Clarke (1954) Afro-Jamaican - producer. 
Gary Wilmot (1954) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor, singer, and comedian.
Natty Wailer / Nathaniel Ian Wynter (1954) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Gary Crosby (1955) Afro-Jamaican - bassist and composer.
Fred Locks / Stafford Elliot (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Johnny Clarke (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tapper Zukie / David Sinclair (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer. 
Beres Hammond (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
DJ Kool Herc / Clive Campbell (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Tony Tuff / Winston Anthony Morris (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Honey Boy / Keith Williams (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Neville Staple (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sylford Walker (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jah Screw / Paul Love (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer. 
Jah Thomas / Nkrumah Thomas (1955) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and record producer. 
Earl "Chinna" Smith (1955) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist.
Ojiji / Rupert Harvey (1955) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Glen Washington (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Tinga Stewart / Neville Stewart (1955) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dread Hinds / David Hinds (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and guitarist.
Don Letts (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician, DJ, and director.
Ambelique / Owen George Anthony Silvera (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Freddie McGregor (1956) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Tyrone Downie (1956) Afro-Jamaican - pianist.
Burro Banton (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Wayne Jarrett (1956) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
U Brown / Huford Brown (1956) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Electric Dread / Winston McAnuff (1957) Jamaican [7/8 Afro-Jamaican, 1/8 Scottish] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and percussionist.
Dean Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Joseph Cotton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Peter Williams (1957) Jamaican - actor. 
Vivian Jones (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eek-A-Mouse / Ripton Joseph Hylton (1957) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Brigadier Jerry (1957) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ini Kamoze / Cecil Campbell (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Junior Giscombe / Norman Giscombe (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Anthony Johnson (1957) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer.
Michael Rose (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Afrika Bambaataa (1957) Afro-Jamaican - disc jockey, rapper, songwriter and producer.
Maxi Jazz / Maxwell Fraser (1957) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, and DJ. 
Ainsley Harriott (1957) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter, entertainer, and celebrity chef.
Lenny Henry / Lensworth Henry (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, tv presenter, comedian, and writer.
Levi Roots / Keith Graham (1958) Afro-Jamaican - musician, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Ras Midas (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
David Reivers (1958) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Earl Sixteen / Earl John Daley (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
George Nooks / Prince Mohammed (1958) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Lone Ranger / Anthony Alphanso Waldron (1958) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Brian Bovell (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa Kojak / Floyd Anthony Perch (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer. 
Mel Gaynor (1959) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Brazilian - singer, drummer, and percussionist.
Sidney Mills (1959) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ranking Joe / Joseph Jackson (1959) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Roy Rayon (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Spanner Banner / Joseph Bonner (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician.
Cleveland Watkiss (1959) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Leo Williams (1959) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist. 
Cocoa Tea / Calvin George Scott (1959) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Luke / Uncle Luke / Luke Skyywalker / Luther Campbell (1960) Afro-Bahamian / Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, record executive, and promoter.
Linford Christie (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former sprinter. 
Peter Metro (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Tiger / Norman Washington Jackson (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Eric "Fish" Clarke (1960) Afro-Jamaican - drummer.
Mikey Craig / Michael Craig (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and guitarist.
Levi Tafari (1960) Afro-Jamaican - actor and poet.
Patrick Andy (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Peter Thomas (1960) Afro-Jamaican - reality star. 
Admiral Tibet / Kenneth Allen (1960) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Shaun Wallace (1960) Afro-Jamaican - tv personality.
General Trees / Amos Edwards (1960) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Pato Banton / Patrick Murray (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Rikki Beadle-Blair (1961) Afro-Jamaican / Unspecified - actor, singer-songwriter, dancer, director, choreographer, screenwriter, and designer.
Professor Nuts / Carl Wellington (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Colin McFarlane (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Master T / Tony Young (1961) Afro-Jamaican - television personality. 
Half Pint / Lindon Andrew Roberts (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Paul Innocent (1961) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Maxi Priest / Max Elliott (1961) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Emanuel Walsh (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Shinehead / Edmund Carl Aiken (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper. 
Colin Salmon (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Robert Ffrench (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer.
Danny Red / Danny Dread / Daniel Clarke (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Triston Palma (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
King Kong / Dennis Anthony Thomas (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Anthony Red Rose (1962) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddie Bo Smith Jr. (1962) Afro-Jamaican - actor and musician. 
Tony Rebel / Patrick George Anthony Barrett (1962) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Super Cat / William Maragh (1963) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Patrick Robinson (1963) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor.
Chaka Demus / John Taylor (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ.
Junior Reid / Delroy Reid (1963) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Courtney Pine (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, flutist, clarinetist, and bassist.
Romero Jennings (1964) Jamaican - makeup artist. 
Gully Bop / Robert Lee Malcolm (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Icho Candy / Winston Evans (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Maurice Dean Wint (1964) Jamaican - actor.
Luciano (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Sanchez / Kevin Anthony Jackson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Barrington Levy (1964) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Stedman Pearson (1964) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and dancer.
Alrick Riley (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Kevin Michael Richardson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Steve Williamson (1964) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist, saxophonist, and composer.
Kurtis Mantronik / Kurtis el Khaleel / Graham Curtis el Khaleel (1965) Jamaican / Syrian - DJ, drummer, keyboardist, and producer.
Gary Beadle (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Lieutenant Stitchie / Cleveland Laing (1965) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Anthony McKay (1965) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified Hispanic - actor, producer and writer. 
Prezident Brown / Fitz Albert Cotterell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Cutty Ranks / Philip Thomas (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Spice / Michael Theophilus Johnson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Slick Rick / Richard Walters (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and producer.
Ice MC / Ian Campbell (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Roderick Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - singer and composer.
Michael Bentt (1965) Afro-Jamaican - actor and former boxer. 
Goldie / Clifford Price (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Scottish - actor, DJ, and visual artist.
Tippa Irie / Anthony Henry (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Coolie Ranx / Obiajula Ugbomah (1965) Yoruba Nigerian / Jamaican - actor and singer.
Junior Williams (1965) Afro-Jamaican / Dominican, Italian - actor. 
Daddy Freddy / S. Frederick Small (1965) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
 Pinchers / Delroy Thompson (1965) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Macka B / Christopher MacFarlane (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Normski / Norman Anderson (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and DJ.
Mark Van Hoen (1966) Jamaican, Punjabi Indian, Dutch, English - musician.
Bushwick Bill (1966) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Richard Chevolleau (1966) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Junior Tucker / Leslie Tucker (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Richie Stephens (1966) Afro-Jamaican - singer and producer. 
Shabba Ranks / Rexton Rawlston Fernando Gordon (1966) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
A Guy Called Gerald / Gerald Simpson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, keyboardist, drummer, and producer.
Arnold Pinnock (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Papa San / Tyrone Thompson (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Jerome Sydenham (1967) Nigerian, Jamaican, British - DJ, musician, producer, and label owner.
Singing Melody / Everton Hardweare (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Andrew Tosh (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Sidney Sloane (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, tv presenter, and radio presenter.
Phillip Leo / Phillip Pottinger (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, guitarist, keyboardist, and producer.
Darren Barrett (1967) Afro-Jamaican - trumpeter-songwriter, flugelhorn player, bandleader, producer, photographer, and videographer.
Young MC / Marvin Young (1967) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, rapper, and producer.
Dennis Seaton (1967) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Capleton / Clifton George Bailey III (1967) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Howard McNair (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Daddy Screw / Michael Alexander Johnson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Chubb Rock / Richard Simpson (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Errol Lee (1968) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Evan Parke (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Tricky / Adrian Thaws (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Guyanese, English - actor, singer, keyboardist, harmonicist, and producer.
Mad Cobra / Cobra / Ewart Everton Brow (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Shaggy / Orville Burrell (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, DJ, and producer.
Ziggy Marley (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, percussionist, and producer.
Adrian Lester (1968) Afro-Jamaican - actor, director, and writer.
Omar / Omar Lye-Fook (1968) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese / Indo-Jamaican] - singer-songwriter, keyboardist, bassist, guitarist, and drummer.
Leeroy Thornhill (1968) Afro-Jamaican, Mauritian - DJ, keyboardist, and dancer.
Kid / Christopher Reid (1968) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, comedian and rapper. 
Roni Size / Ryan Williams (1969) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and producer.
Mark Rhino Smith (1969) Jamaican, Cherokee, Ghanaian, Chinese, Unspecified White - actor.
Junior Kelly / Keith Morgan (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garfield Wilson (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Roger Cross (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Spragga Benz / Carlton Errington Grant (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mark Smith (1969) Afro-Jamaican - actor and body builder.
Thriller U / Eustace Hamilton (1969) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
B.O. Dubb / Raymond Ebanks (1970) Afro-Jamaican, English / Finnish - rapper. 
Conrad Coates (1970) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Jah Mason / Andre Johnson (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Pete Rock (1970) Afro-Jamaican - producer, DJ and rapper.
Derrick Morgan (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Tyson Beckford (1970) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese], Afro-Panamanian - actor and model.
Delroy Pearson (1970) Afro-Jamaican, Indo-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Flourgon / Michael May (1970) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Me One / Eric Martin (1970) Jamaican - singer-songwriter, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and producer.
Yami Bolo / Rolando Ephraim McLean (1970) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Tony T. / Neal Antone Dyer (1971) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and DJ.
General Levy / Paul Scott Levy (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
D-Flame / Daniel Kretschmer (1971) Jamaican / German - rapper.
Anthony Hoyes (1971) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Richie Spice / Richell Bonner (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Merciless / Leonard Bartley (1971) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Sadiki / Henry Buckley Jr. (1971) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bounty Killer / Rodney Basil Price (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Ian Edwards (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, producer, and writer.
Chuck Fenda / Leshorn Whitehead (1972) Afro-Jamaican - musician and DJ. 
Roots Manuva / Rodney Smith (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, producer, and remixer.
Stephen Marley (1972) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer and producer.
Tony Matterhorn (1972) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Raymond T. Williams (1972) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Erik Griffin (1972) Jamaican, Belizean, Honduran [African, Indian, Spanish, Possibly Other] / Irish, Possibly Other - comedian, writer and actor. 
Wayne Wonder / Von Wayne Charles (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Rikrok / Ricardo Ducent (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Little Hero / Paul Gayle (1972) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Busta Rhymes / Trevor George Smith, Jr. (1972) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Wentworth Miller (1972) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 African-American, 1/4 Rusyn, 1/8 Curaçaoan [Dutch, French, Swedish, Hispanic, Polish], 1/16 Lebanese, 1/16 Syrian - actor and model.
Doron Bell (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Mark Shim (1973) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Antonio / Maurice Silvera  (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chezidek / Desbert Johnson (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Stephen Graham (1973) 1/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Swedish, 1/4 Irish, 1/4 English - actor. 
Buju Banton / Mark Anthony Myrie (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Bushman / Dwight Duncan (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ismael Lea South (1973) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Glen Scott (1973) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and arranger.
Sean Paul / Sean Paul Francis Henriques (1973) Jamaican [Chinese, English, German / Afro-Jamaican, Portuguese Jewish, French Jewish, Serbian Jewish, Dutch Jewish, German Jewish] - rapper, singer, and producer.
Nicholas Pinnock (1973) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Ghost / Carlton Hylton (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Don Yute (1974) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Adrian Holmes (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Canibus / Germaine Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and actor.
Mr. Vegas / Clifford Smith (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Terror Fabulous / Cecil Campbell (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Mega Banton / Garth Williams (1974) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Andru Donalds (1974) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Rampage / Roger McNair (1974) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Kevin Hanchard (1974) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Mr. Lexx / Lexxus / Christopher George Palmer (1974) Afro-Jamaican - performer.
Huey Dunbar / Eustace Dunbar IV (1974) Jamaican / Puerto Rican - singer.
Laurence Westgaph (1975) Nigerian / Jamaican, Barbadian - model and tv presenter.
Des Coleman / Desune Coleman (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, and weather presenter.
Choclair / Kareem Blake (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Glenn Lewis (1975) Jamaican / Trinidadian - singer.
Klashnekoff / Ricochet Klashnekoff / Darren Kandler (1975) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Julian Marley (1975) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer.
Dulé Hill (1975) Afro-Jamaican - actor and dancer. 
Elephant Man / Oneal Bryan (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer.
Lutan Fyah / Anthony Martin (1975) Afro-Jamaican - musician and singer. 
Keron Grant (1976) Afro-Jamaican - comic artist. 
Kardinal Offishall / Jason D. Harrow (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Laza Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Ky-Mani Marley (1976) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - actor, singer-songwriter, guitarist, trumpetist, pianist, and bongo player.
Gramps Morgan Roy Morgan (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Anthony B / Keith Blair (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Eddy Wata (1976) Nigerian / Jamaican - singer.
Duane Stephenson (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Fantan Mojah (1976) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Sizzla / Miguel Orlando Collins (1976) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Vybz Kartel (1976) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Pierre Gage (1977) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Garfield Taylor (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Natty King / Kevin Christopher Roberts (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bryan Art (1977) Afro-Jamaican - singer, songwriter, musician, producer, and guitarist.
Wally Rudolph (1977) Afro-Jamaican - actor and writer. 
Dan-e-o / Daniel Faraldo (1977) Afro-Jamaican, Spanish - actor and singer. 
Doc Brown / Ben Bailey Smith (1977) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor. 
Soweto Kinch (1978) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - saxophonist.
Hector Lincoln (1978) Jamaican, Cuban - actor.
Jermaine Fagan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Swizz Beatz / Kasseem Dean (1978) Afro-Jamaican, Puerto Rican - producer, rapper, DJ, and entrepreneur.
Da'Ville / Orville Thomas (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Garrison Hawk (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Walker T / Marvin Christopher Walker (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer.
Shane West (1978) Jamaican [English, Sephardi Jewish, distant Scottish] / Cajun [French], distant Spanish, English, Irish - actor and musician. 
Glamma Kid / Iyael Lyases Tafari Constable (1978) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Damian Marley (1978) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English] - singer-songwriter, rapper, DJ, and producer.
Jah Cure / Siccature Alcock (1978) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Shemron O. Cowan (1978) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Lyriq Bent (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Gunplay / Richard Morales Jr. (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Busy Signal / Reanno Devon Gordon (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kamau Preston (1979) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Shiah Coore (1979) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Warrior King (1979) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Vacca / Alessandro Vacca (1979) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jade Jones (1979) Afro-Jamaican / English - singer-songwriter, tv personality, and celebrity chef.
Paul Campbell (1979) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Leon Lopez (1979) Afro-Jamaican / Spanish - actor, singer-songwriter, model, tv presenter, and director.
Rory Reid (1979) Afro-Jamaican - tv presenter.
Shequida / Shequida Hall / Gary Hall (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, drag queen, and playwright.
Mighty Mystic / Kevin Mark Holness (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Karamo Brown (1980) Afro-Jamaican - tv host and television personality.
Alano Miller (1980) Jamaican, Bahamian, Cuban - actor.
Jaja Soze / Elijah Kerr (1980) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
DJ Flava / Kemar McGregor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - producer.
Kevin Mark Trail (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Floyd West / Pied Piper (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Wayne Marshall (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Claude Kelly (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and producer.
Perfect / Greg Rose (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
I Wayne / Cliffroy Taylor (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Ding Dong Ravers /  Kemar Christopher "Ding Dong" Dwaine Ottey (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer and dancer. 
Teacha Dee / Damion Darrel Warren (1980) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Protoje / Oje Ben Ollivierre (1981) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Vincentian - singer.
Marvin Priest / Marvin Cornell Elliott (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Ricky Whittle (1981) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor and model.
E-Dee / Everton Charles Dennis (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Desus Nice / Daniel Baker (1981) Afro-Jamaican  - comedian and social media personality. 
Kalil Wilson (1981) Nigerian, Kalinago, Jamaican, French, English - singer, pianist, percussionist, composer, and arranger.
Omar Turner (1981) Afro-Jamaican - writer.
DeeWunn / Damone Walker (1981) Afro-Jamaican - MC, songwriter and performer. 
Safaree Samuels (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper and tv personality.
Mavado / David Constantine Brooks (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and singer.
Aidonia / Sheldon Lawrence (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Tarrus Riley (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Merchant / Ricardo Renford Nicholson (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, writer and producer. 
Exco Levi / Wayne Ford Levy (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Willy William (1981) Afro-Jamaican - DJ, record producer, and singer.
City Boy / Bradley McIntosh (1981) Afro-Jamaican - singer, rapper, record producer and former actor.
Danny Lee Wynter / Danny Wynter (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Romani, Italian - actor and writer.
Muslim Belal / Ashley Chin (1982) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Chinese] - actor, rapper, spoken word artist, screenwriter, and poet.
Samuel Anderson (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor.
DJ Nicco (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Serani / Craig Serani Marsh (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Demarco / Collin Demar Edwards (1982) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Blakkman / Oral White (1982) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ.
Gak Jonze / Micah Lei (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Assassin / Jeffrey Campbell (1982) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Jammer / Jahmek Power (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, MC, and producer.
Mo George / Mohammed George (1982) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Antiguan - actor.
Asher D (1982) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Walshy Fire / Leighton Walsh (1982) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ, MC, and producer.
Giggs / Nathaniel Thompson (1983) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Akala / Kingslee McLean Daley (1983) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, Afro-Grenadian / Irish, Scottish, English, German - rapper-songwriter, poet, journalist, and activist.
Rolan Bell (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
D.J. Taylor (1983) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish - actor.
Howard Charles (1983) Afro-Jamaican, English - actor. 
Shebada / Keith Ramsay (1983) Afro-Jamaican - actor and comedian. 
Eldie Anthony (1984) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Ghetts / Justin Clarke (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper.
Blak Ryno / Ryno Di Stinger (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman (1984) Afro-Jamaican / likely English - actor and model. 
Shawn Emanuel (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter, pianist, and producer.
I-Octane / Byiome Muir (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Dev / Devin Joseph Griffin (1984) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor, DJ, and radio presenter.
Kalado / Eton Gordon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Booba Starr / Dane Salmon (1984) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Big Narstie / Tyrone Lindo (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, singer, and MC.
Sinqua Walls (1985) Afro-Jamaican, French, Unspecified Native American, possibly other - actor. 
Bashy / Ashley Thomas (1985) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Dominiquais - actor and rapper-songwriter.
Stylo G / Jason McDermott (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter and rapper.
Taxstone / Daryl Campbell (1985) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and social media personality. 
Konshens / Garfield Spence (1985) Afro-Jamaican - singer, DJ, and producer.
Wretch 32 / Jermaine Sinclair (1985) Afro-Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Kano / Kane Robinson (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor and rapper.
Nineteen85 / Anthony Paul Jefferies (1985) Afro-Jamaican - producer and songwriter.
Smiler / Joseph Bartlett-Vanderpuye (1985) Jamaican, Guyanese, Zambian - rapper and MC.
Marvin Humes (1985) Afro-Jamaican / English, Scottish - singer, disc jockey, television presenter, and radio host.
Dexta Daps / Louis Grandison (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Jonathan Emile (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and singer. 
OMI / Omar Samuel Pasley (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Starboy Nathan / Nathan / Nathan Fagan-Gayle (1986) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Rusty Beaman (1986) Jamaican - actor. 
Penn Badgley (1986) English, Irish, likely around 1/16th or 1/32 Afro-Jamaican, as well as German and Scottish, Dutch, Welsh, French Huguenot - actor and musician. 
Rocky B / Plat’num B / Bezzle / Marcel Somerville (1986) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, and producer.
Scorcher / Tayo Jarrett (1986) Nigerian, Jamaican, Vincentian - rapper.
iSH / Ishan Morris (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Irish - actor and singer. 
Boi-1da / Matthew Samuels (1986) Afro-Jamaican - keyboardist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Tyler Lepley (1987) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor. 
Fazer / Richard Rawson (1987) Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper-songwriter, singer, DJ, and producer.
Christopher Martin (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Kid Fury / Gregory A. Smith (1987) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber, comedian, and writer.
Tommy Lee Sparta / Leroy "Junior" Russell (1987) Afro-Jamaican - singer
SPOT (1987) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Irish] / Afro-Guyanese - rapper and pianist.
Mike Beatz / Michael Anthony Barnett (1988) Afro-Jamaican - hip-hop recording artist and producer.
King Bach / Andrew B. Bachelor (1988) Afro-Jamaican - actor, comedian, and Internet personality.
Third World Don (1988) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and music producer. 
Kemuel Crossty (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actress.
LunchMoney Lewis / Gamal Lewis (1988) Afro-Jamaican  - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
T-Minus / Tyler Mathew Carl Williams (1988) Afro-Jamaican - record producer. 
Nick Sagar (1988) Jamaican / Guyanese - actor.
Popcaan /  Andrae Hugh Sutherland (1988) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Mo Gilligan / Mosiah Gilligan (1988) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Aston Merrygold (1988) Afro-Jamaican / Irish, English - actor, singer-songwriter, tv personality, and dancer. 
Charly Black (1989) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Meechy Darko / Dimitri Simms (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Malachi Kirby (1989) Jamaican [3/4 Afro-Jamaican, 1/4 Unspecified South Asian] - actor.
Eka Darville (1989) Afro-Jamaican, some Unspecified White - actor. 
Labrinth / Timothy Lee Mckenzie (1989) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Kittian, Afro-Nevisian - singer, rapper, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer.
Bambaata Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter, guitarist, pianist, drummer, and percussionist.
Ricardo Hewitt (1989) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Leroy Kenton (1989) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Andrew Trabass (1989) Afro-Jamaican - comedian, actor, musician and YouTuber.
Corbin Bleu (1989) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor, dancer and singer. 
Jesse Royal (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino] - singer-song 
Daniel Marley (1989) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English] / Iranian Jewish - rapper.
Geaux Yella (1989) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Sean Kingston (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer and rapper. 
Chip / Chipmunk / Jahmaal Fyffe (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Byron Carvil Cecil Napier (1990) Afro-Jamaican - actor.. 
Govana / Romeo Nelson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Forbes (1990) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Dominiquais - actor, comedian, and writer.
Leeroy Reed (1990) Afro-Jamaican - rapper and tv personality.
Romain Virgo (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Russhaine Berry (1990) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Kranium / Kemar Donaldson (1990) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bena Di Senior / Radeem Haslam (1991) Afro-Jamaican - musician, producer and entrepreneur
Chad Subratie (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jo Mersa Marley (1991) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
DJ Akademiks (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber. 
Shamier Anderson (1991) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Blaize Andres (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Mexican - actor. 
Quite Perry / Rohan Perry (1991) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Sevn Thomas (1991) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer. 
Zuse (1991) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Jah Lando (1991) Afro-Jamaican - DJ and rapper. 
Jamali Maddix (1991) Afro-Jamaican / Italian, British - comedian.
Tre C. Roberts (1992) Jamaican / Trinidadian - actor. 
Jahmiel (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Chronixx / Jamar McNaughton (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jason Facey (1992) Afro-Jamaica - dancer, choreographer, producer, actor, photographer, and clothing designer.
Drew Ray Tanner (1992) Chinese, Afro-Jamaican, French-Canadian, possibly other - actor. 
Prince Marni (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Vincent Ross (1992) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Lloyd Barker (1992) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Indie Allen / Michael Allen (1992) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Stephan James (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Krishane / St Aubyn Antonio Levy (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Kortnee Simmons (1993) African, Dominican, Brazilian, Jamaican, Unspecified Native American - actor. 
Jhaedee Richards (1993) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Alkaline / Earlan Bartley (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Demetrius Joyette (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masego / Micah Davis (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer and saxophonist.
Shane Paul McGhie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Masicka / Javaun Fearon (1993) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Jourdan Copeland (1993) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Rejjie Snow / Alex Anyaebunam (1993) Igbo Nigerian / Jamaican, Irish - rapper-songwriter and producer.
The Chicken Connoisseur / Elijah Quashie (1993) Afro-Jamaican - youtuber and restaurant critic.
Cashief Nichols (1993) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
PartyNextDoor / Jahron Anthony Brathwaite (1993) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Trinidadian - rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer.
Dalton Harris (1993) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Jaboukie Young-White (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Cuban, Chinese, Irish - comedian and writer.
Kedar Williams-Stirling (1994) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
JavierNathaniel (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Aaron Miller (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Jnel / Jnel Comedy (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Don Hinds (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber. 
Romone Robinson (1994) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber. 
RiskyKidd / Shane Schuller (1994) Afro-Jamaican / German - rapper, guitarist, and pianist.
QQ / Kareem Dawkins (1994) Afro-Jamaican - singer..
Layton Williams (1994) Afro-Jamaican, Montserratian - actor, singer, and dancer.
Jonny Brown (1994) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Robb Banks / Richard O'Neil Burrell (1994) Afro-Barbadian / Unknown - rapper. 
Daniel Caesar (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Barbadian - singer. 
Joey Badass / Jo-Vaughn Virginie Scott (1995) Afro-Jamaican  - rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer and actor.
Shameik Moore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer, dancer, and rapper.
Derrick Monasterio (1995) Jamaican [Lebanese, East Indian, Sephardi Jewish, Scottish], Italian / Filipino [Tagalog, Waray], Spanish [Castilian, Valencian], English - actor, dancer, and singer.
Yaadman Etan (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Raz Fresco (1995) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
KyngTavii / Tovaughn Hamilton (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
K'Vonne Legore (1995) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Skip Marley (1996) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter.
Astro / Brian Vaughn Bradley, Jr. (1996) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, producer, and actor. 
C.J. Wallace (1996) Afro-Jamaican / African-American, European - entrepreneur, actor, and musician.
Tevin Steele (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fry Irish (1996) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Montell Martin (1996) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Twani Price (1996) Afro-Jamaican - Instagrammer.
Montel Douglas (1996) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Kyle Bent (1997) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Zion David Marley (1997) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - rapper.
Khalil Madovi (1997) Jamaican, Zimbabwean - actor, rapper, singer, tv presenter, producer, and artist.
Alton Mason (1997) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Harris J / Harris Jung (1997) Jamaican, English / Indian, Irish - singer, guitarist, and pianist.
Deron Campbell (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Yanrique Wright (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Joseph Griffin (1998) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Shevon Salmon (1998) Afro-Jamaican - YouTuber.
Jaden Smith (1998) 3/4 African-American, 1/8 Afro-Barbadian, 1/8 Afro-Jamaican - actor, rapper, singer and model. 
Malique Thompson-Dwyer (1998) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Romaine Dixon (1999) Afro-Jamaican - model.
ItzMarico (2000) Afro-Jamaican - Tik Tok star. 
Joshua Omaru Marley (2002) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, Scottish, English, Possibly Other] / African-American - singer and model.
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Hakka Chinese] - bassist.
Yohan Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, Cuban, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - singer.
Shaun Escoffery (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and singer.
Gerald Eaton (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] - singer-songwriter and producer.
Juice Aleem (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper.
Supa Dups / Dwayne Chin-Quee (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Hakka Chinese, Possibly Other Chinese, German] - DJ, drummer, and producer.
KJ Marley (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Ghanaian, Syrian Jewish, English Jewish, Irish, English, Possibly Other] - rapper.
Arrow Benjamin / Dean McIntosh (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Willy Chin / Warren Hoo (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ and producer.
Carl Henry (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
The Kemist (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, English] - DJ, songwriter, and producer.
Jah Vinci / Kirk Rhoden (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Bobby Chin (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese] - DJ.
Eddy François (?) Jamaican, Haitian - singer.
Sid O'Connell (?) Afro-Jamaican, Irish - actor and producer. 
Nathan Mitchell (?) Jamaican, Trinidadian - actor. 
Junior Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian.
Neil Reidman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Toby Sandeman (?) Afro-Jamaican, French, English - actor and athlete. 
Sanjay Orlando (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
GAIKA (?) Afro-Jamaican / Afro-Grenadian - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Jordane Christie (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Adam Gifford (?) Jamaican, Costa Rican, Cherokee, Italian - actor. 
Jurell Carter (?) Afro-Jamaican / English - actor. 
Dexter Bell (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Lloyd Everitt (?) Afro-Jamaican / Welsh - actor. 
Martin Huss (?) Afro-Jamaican - model and rapper. 
Shawn Turner (?) Afro-Jamaican, Unspecified - actor. 
Allius Barnes (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Roe Dunkley (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Justin Harris (?) Afro-Jamaican, German - actor. 
Wayne Booth (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Fletcher Harrington (?) Afro-Jamaican, Scottish, Russian, English - actor. 
Scott Xylo / Shaquille Thompson (?) Afro-Jamaican - bassist-songwriter, drummer, and producer.
Jah Turban (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer-songwriter.
Alexander Nunez (?) Afro-Jamaican / Chilean - actor. 
Jimel Atkins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Nari Blair-Mangat (?) Afro-Jamaican / Indian - actor. 
Dimitri Abold (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Shomari (?) Jamaican, Sierra Leonean - actor. 
Di Vinci SanTana (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor. 
Jackie Guy (?) Jamaican - dancer and choreographer.
Danilo Reyes (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor and musician. 
Andrew Adams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Stephen Barrington (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Darien LaBeach (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
G.K. Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, West Indian, Italian, Scottish. - actor. 
Trinity Brooks (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Shomari Downer (?) Afro-Jamaican, possibly British - actor. 
Trevor Thomas (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Colton Royce (?) Afro-Jamaican / Filipino - actor. 
Mark Green (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Damiãn Garth Brown (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Sure Shot / Mark Duffus (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, drummer, and producer.
Dudney Joseph Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Odell Davis Jr. (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor, singer-songwriter, and producer.
Christian Wong (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - actor. 
Sebastien Heins (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
DJ Excalibah / Matthew Xia (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Chinese, Possibly Other] / Scottish, English - DJ, radio presenter, and director.
Jason Robinson (?) Jamaican - actor. 
Durant Mcleod (?) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, Chinese, Jewish, Scottish] - actor. 
Joshua Nathan Guardabascio (?) Afro-Jamaican / Italian - actor. 
DJ Ace Koromantyn (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper, DJ, producer, and blogger.
Endless / Allan Tennent (?) Jamaican - actor. 
Marc Anthony Lowe (?) Indo-Jamaican / South Indian, Taino, Chinese - actor.
Matt U Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Dennis Leonard Johnson (?) Afro-Jamaican / Unknown - actor. 
Kenya Wint (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor. 
Brushy One String / Andrew Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and musician. 
Di Genius / Stephen McGregor (?) Afro-Jamaican - producer and singer.
General Degree / Cardiff Butt /  Snapple Dapple (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Indecka / Chevol Grant (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Kashief Lindo (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Five Steez (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Gary Pine (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Delly Ranx (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Rvssian / Tarik Johnston (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.  
Eklypse Sicka / Keniel Flowers (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.  
Herman Marquis (?) Afro-Jamaican - saxophonist.
Harold Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - pianist and songwriter.
Ron Butler (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist. 
Phil Chen (?) Jamaican [Chinese] - guitarist.
Nelson Miller (?) Afro-Jamaican - drummer. 
Mad Lion / Oswald Priest (?) fro-Jamaican - rapper and musician. 
Arif Cooper (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician, music producer, event promoter and a radio broadcaster.
Steven "Lenky" Marsden (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Alozade / Michael Sterling (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ.
Calton Coffie (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Mikey Dangerous (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Conrad Bromfield (?) Afro-Jamaican - model.
Ras Criss (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Kirk Diamond (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Ras Droppa / Samuel Richards (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Prince Hammer / Beris Simpson (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and DJ. 
Kiprich / Marlon Jaro Plunkett (?) Afro-Jamaican - DJ. 
Denroy Morgan (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer.
Louie Rankin (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer and actor.
Addis Pablo (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Willi Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician and producer. 
Michael Cory Davis (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and filmmaker.
Pablo Gad (?) Afro-Jamaican - singer. 
Ernest Cupidon (?) Afro-Jamaican - comedian and actor. 
Alicai Harley (?) Afro-Jamaican - rapper. 
Charles Officer (?) Afro-Jamaican - writer, actor and director. 
Dean Redman (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor.
Orisha Shakpana (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Tre Mission (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Walter Chin (?) Afro-Jamaican - celebrity photographer. 
Jay Douglas (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician. 
Carl Harvey (?) Afro-Jamaican - guitarist and producer. 
Nigel Shawn Williams (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and director. 
Lemur Shifaka (?) Afro-Jamaican - musician.
Dana Carrabon (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: kidcarra)
Rh’mone Foster (?) Afro-Jamaican - actor and model (Instagram: bookfrostyee)
T.J. Moore (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: inspiremoore)
Dlorenzo (?) Afro-Jamaican - model (Instagram: dlorenzo_official)
NB:
Parisa Fitz-Henley (1977) Afro-Jamaican - Non-Binary (She/Her and They/Them Pronouns) - actor.
Ellyn Jade / Jade Willoughby (1990) Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican, Taino, British] / Ojibwe - Two-Spirit (Unspecified Pronouns) - model and actor.
Not problematic but has expressed being uncomfortable being used so don’t use!:
Justine Skye / Justine Skyers (1995) Afro-Jamaican / Indo-Jamaican - actress, singer-songwriter, and model. - Source.
Problematic:
Lady C / Lady Colin Campbell (1949) Jamaican [Lebanese / Sephardic Jewish, Spanish, Portuguese, Irish, English] - tv host, radio host, socialite, and author. - Intersex! - Anti-black racist comments about Meghan Markle and Meghan and Harry’s baby and whorephobic comments.
Rustie Lee (1953) Afro-Jamaican - actress, singer, tv personality, and celebrity chef. - UKIP supporter.
Wayne Jobson (1954) Jamaican [Unspecified White] - musician and producer. - Appropriation of dreadlocks.
Al Roker (1954) Afro-Jamaican, African-American / Afro-Bahamian - actor, tv personality, weather forecaster, journalist, and author. - Comments that are racist to Japanese people and defended a white weatherman over his racist remarks referring to Martin Luther King Jr.
Yehoshua Sofer (1958) Jamaican [Ukrainian Jewish] - rapper - Appropriation of dreadlocks and anti-black comments, including referring to Rastafarians as a “cult”.
Mike Tyson (1966) African-American, likely Afro-Jamaican - boxer and actor. - Convicted of rape and is a Tier II sex offender.
Jeremy Renner (1971) Panamanian / Jamaican [Afro-Jamaican], German, English, Scottish, Swedish, Irish - actor, singer, producer - N-word, g-slur, t-word, w-word to refer to Black Widow, played a Nazi character and described him as a “poor twisted soul”, saying a movie about a Nazi falling in love with a black woman “isn’t about racism” to him it’s “people with problems and how they choose to deal with them” and calls it “sweet and endearing”, and compared trans women to crossdressers.
Jason Barrett (1976) Afro-Jamaican - actor, screenwriter, and mixed martial artist. - Arrested for illegally selling guns.
Pete Wentz (1979) Afro-Jamaican / German, English - musician. - Dated a 15 year old when he was 23 who he later posted revenge porn of and threatened.
Kaya Jones / Chrystal Neria (1984) German, Irish, Scottish, Spanish, Unconfirmed Costa Rican, Unconfirmed Nicaraguan, Unconfirmed Panamanian, Unconfirmed Jamaican, Unconfirmed Chinese, Unconfirmed Colombian, Unconfirmed Unspecified Black, Unconfirmed Jewish / Italian [including Sicilian], Unconfirmed Mexican, Unconfirmed Apache - singer, violinist, DJ, model, actress, and dancer - Trump supporter who even has said she would like to put down the first brick in the wall on the Mexican border, has used multiple racial slurs, has compared the residential school system of Native Americans to white people willingly sending their kids to boarding schools, Islamophobic comments, anti-black comments, and honestly so much more.
Aml Ameen (1985) Afro-Jamaican - actor - Transphobia.
Teddy Sinclair / Natalia Kills / Natalia Cappucini / Verbalicious / Natalia Keery-Fisher (1986) Afro-Jamaican / Uruguayan [Italian, Irish, Possibly Other] - singer, guitarist, drummer, and actress. - Bullied an X-Factor contestant.
Madeleine Mantock (1990) Jamaican, Unspecified White - actress. - Plays a Latine character on Charmed when she is not Latine.
Frank Dillane (1991) Afro-Jamaican / English, Irish, Scottish, remote Manx - actor - Arrested for battery. 
Leigh-Anne Pinnock (1991) Afro-Jamaican, Afro-Barbadian, possibly other - singer. - Defended her boyfriend after he made homophobic remarks.
Herizen Guardiola (1996) Afro-Jamaican / Cuban - actress and singer-songwriter. - Dated a 16-year-old when she was 20.
18 notes · View notes
acihotel · 4 years ago
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Những màu sơn thường được sử dụng
Không có "quy tắc" nào cần tuân theo khi design căn nhà mơ ước của bạn. Nếu bạn thích một bức tường theo phong cách chiết trung, thì hãy thực hiện nó. Nếu phong cách của bạn là tối giản, hãy nắm bắt những design đơn giản với những gam màu êm dịu. Và nếu bạn yêu thích những họa tiết táo bạo theo chủ nghĩa tối đa, thì đừng ngần ngại sử dụng những gam màu yêu thích.
Tuy vậy, chuyên gia sẽ hỗ trợ bạn đưa ra những quyết định sáng suốt hơn trong việc decor nhà. Họ đã chia sẻ tám màu sơn nội thất “thảm họa nhất”, và những Sắc màu tuyệt vời hơn để bạn cũng rất có thể sử dụng thay thế.
Tránh: Màu trắng nhạt, nên thử: Màu trắng xám
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Theo kinh nghiệm của nhà design Emma Beryl, màu sơn trắng nhạt nên tránh làm tông màu chủ đạo của một căn phòng. Cô ấy giải thích rằng màu sơn này có nhiều loại Sắc màu gần tương đương khác nhau, sẽ khiến căn phòng trông kém hấp dẫn hơn tùy thuộc vào ánh sáng. Thay vì tông màu này, cô ấy khuyên bạn nên lựa trọn sơn gam gam màu xám với tông tone lạnh hơn.
Tránh: Màu xanh dương Royal (Royal Blue), nên thử: Màu xanh thanh cúc (Cornflower Blue)
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Theo nhà design nội thất Megan Hopp: "Xanh dương là tông màu yêu thích của rất nhiều chủ nhà". Tuy nhiên, khi nhắc tới gam màu xanh Royal, Hopp cho biết: “Tông màu này gây khó chịu và gần như ko thể sử dụng cho căn nhà.” Để thay thế, cô ấy gợi ý hãy thử gam màu xanh thanh cúc ko quá đậm or quá nhạt.
Tránh: Màu chanh, nên thử: Màu xanh lá cây đậm
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Mặc dù những bộ quần áo với gam màu chanh rất có thể là xu thế hợp trào lưu trong giới thời trang. Tuy vậy, nhà design Rayman Boozer cho rằng Sắc màu này ko hề thích hợp với nội thất một chút nào. "Màu chanh quá sáng," anh ấy giải thích. "Tôi đã thử nó một lần cách đây khoảng vài năm trong nhà bếp của chính mình và hối hận ngay tức khắc.” Thay vì làm “đau mắt” bạn và những vị khách tới chơi nhà bằng Sắc màu sáng chói như vậy, hãy thử sử dụng gam màu xanh lá cây đậm hơn, tinh tế hơn.
Tránh: Màu neon, nên thử: Màu xám nhẹ nhàng
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Neon là một Sắc màu khác cũng đang rất thịnh hành trong thời trang nhưng điều đó rất có thể ko thích hợp với căn nhà của bạn. Đó là ý kiến của hai nhà design của C.ty trang chủpolish, Larisa Barton và Crystal Sinclair. Barton cho hay: “Màu sơn neon tạo ra cảm xúc mài mòn trong bất kỳ căn phòng nào. Thật tuyệt khi sử dụng Sắc màu nhưng đối với những tông màu thái quá, nó sẽ làm bạn ko thể tập trung vào những thứ khác".
Sinclair cũng đồng ý với quan đặc điểm đó. Chuyên gia này cho rằng màu neon chính là một trong những gam màu “thái quá”. Thay vì sử dụng Sắc màu này này, hãy lựa trọn màu sơn nội thất mang lại cảm xúc thanh thoát hơn như gam màu xám nhẹ nhàng. Đây là một trong những màu yêu thích của Barton vào thời đặc điểm đó. "Nó được cho phép bạn có một ko gian sạch sẽ nhẹ nhàng mà ko cảm thấy quá nhạt nhẽo," cô ấy chia sẻ.
Tránh: Màu pastel nhợt nhạt, nên thử: Màu xám trung tính nhẹ nhàng
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Sinclair cũng coi những màu như xanh lam, vàng và hồng nhợt nhạt là một trong những màu sơn nội thất tồi tệ nhất vì chúng có xu thế sáng hơn so với gam màu truyền thống. "Những Sắc màu này khiến căn phòng trông như phủ lớp sương mờ ảo ko chút điểm nổi trội," chuyên gia cho biết. Thay vì những màu này, cô ấy khuyên bạn nên sử dụng sơn gam màu xám trung tính nhẹ nhàng. Đó là một Sắc màu vượt thời gian và nó thực sự rất có thể tạo ra điều tuyệt vời trong mọi ko gian.
Tránh: Màu nâu cơ bản, nên thử: Màu nâu chocolate
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Hopp khuyên: “Đừng sơn tone nâu cơ bản cho bức tường của bạn.” Theo cô, tone nâu cơ bản là một trong những màu sơn nội thất tệ nhất mà bạn sử dụng. Tuy nhiên, điều đó ko Tức là tất cả các màu sơn nâu đều nên tránh. Cô ấy chấp nhận 1 số) tông gam màu be nhất định, cũng như tone nâu chocolate đậm đà và sang trọng hơn. Nâu chocolate rất có thể làm một điểm nổi trội or làm tông màu chủ đạo trong toàn bộ căn phòng.
Tránh: Màu đỏ, nên thử: Màu xanh lam mát lạnh
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Boozer khuyên bạn nên tránh xa những màu sơn đỏ, ko giống nhau là trong buồng ngủ. “Màu đỏ hơi quá đà và khiến bạn ko thể giải trí,” chuyên gia giải thích. Nếu bạn yêu thích màu sơn đỏ, hãy nghĩ kỹ sử dụng nó với liều lượng nhỏ. Bên cạnh đó, hãy thử sử dụng gam màu xanh lam mát lạnh. "Đó là một Sắc màu thoáng mát và êm dịu, nhưng ko hề nhàm chán", Boozer cho biết. Đồng thời, gam màu xanh lam sẽ ko trở nên lỗi thời theo thời gian.
Tránh: Màu be (được sơn sẵn của chủ thầu thi công), nên thử: Màu xám Whale
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Màu be được chủ thầu sơn sẵn, được sử dụng cho khá nhiều căn nhà. "Đây ko phải là gam màu thuần. Đó là một Sắc màu khiến căn phòng trở nên ảm đạm và ko có gì nổi trội," Sinclair chia sẻ.
Để có màu sơn trung tính ko gây cảm xúc nhàm chán, hãy lựa trọn màu sơn xám sang trọng. Màu xám “cá voi” - Whale Grey là một trong những gam màu yêu thích của Sinclair và sẽ là một sự thay thế tuyệt vời cho gam màu be nhàm chán.
Coi nguyên bài viết ở : Những màu sơn thường được sử dụng
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inexpensiveprogress · 6 years ago
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AIA Everyman Prints
Artists International Association was an exhibiting society founded in London in 1933, which held exhibitions and events to promote and support various left-of centre political causes. Having come out of the First World War and then seeing the global effect of the Great Depression in 1929 many of these artists wanted to promote a better world. Though the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War erupted it was important to have a society where artists could still publicly protest war in a subtle way.
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 Vanessa Bell - London Children in the Country, 1939 
The principal founders of the A.I.A. were Misha Black, James Boswell, Clifford Rowe and Pearl Binder. The guiding ethos was to promote a radical response to political events in the world. A unity against Fascism, both home and abroad.
Its membership quickly grew throughout the 1930s and 1940s (930 members by 1945) so that in 1947 it was able to acquire permanent premises in Lisle Street. In the 50′s the political aims of the group were dropped after they broadcast support for an alliance between Britain and the Soviet Union. In 1953 it became an exhibiting society.
In the Second World War the A.I.A. started a series of prints but due to the economic climate of WW2 it wasn’t a vast success. 
In 1942 it was reported to members that the scheme had run into production and retailing difficulties and with ultimately only about 5,000 prints sold, the royalities could not have been very remunerative. †
The print series ran from 1939 to 1942 and all the images in this post are taken from the series. 
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 Helen Binyon - The Flower Show, 1939. - Everyman Prints AIA
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 James Boswell - Hunger marchers in Hyde Park, 1939 - Everyman Prints AIA
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 Helen Binyon - Summer Holiday, Walton-on-Naze, 1939. - Everyman Prints AIA 
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 Lowes Dalbiac Luard - The Rescue, 1939 - Everyman Prints AIA
List of Artists International Association print series - 1939 to 1942
Mary Adshead - Sprint on Woodhouse Moor
S R Badmin - A British Common & Down for a Refill
Durac Barnett - Bread and Circuses
Vanessa Bell - London Children in the Country
Pearl Binder - Evacuation Scene, 1939
Helen Binyon - The Flower Show
Helen Binyon - Summer Holiday, Walton-on-Naze
Helen Binyon - The Gate
Stephen Bone - Village on coast
Arthur Boyce - Upheaval
James Boswell - Candidate for Glory
James Boswell - Gitte Business
James Boswell - Hunger Marchers in Hyde Park
Herbert Budd - September, 193 9
Robert Butler - The Station
David Caplan - Liverpool Station
Raymond Coxon - Evacuated Children at a Yorkshire Village
Moira Evans - August Bank Holiday
Moira Evans - November 11th, 193 9
Chris Fontaine - The Library
Kathleen Gardiner - Market Day
Phyllis Ginger - Chimps at the Zoo
Rowland Hilder - Landscape
James Holland - ‘Here They Come’
James Holland - Country Town the Militia
James Holland - News Reel
Henry Holzer - Barrage Balloon
Diana John - On the Beach
Diana John - Evacuees, Bradford-on-Avon
Helen Kapp - ‘My Marmaduke’
Helen Kapp - A Queen’s Hall Prom
Helen Kapp - English Rose
Helen Kapp - Black-out; Listening to Beethoven
L D Luard - The Rescue
Peter Barker Mill - The Threat
Mona Moore - Draught Players
Theodore Naish - Underground
Freda Nichols - Fun Fair
Russel Reeve - Barrage Balloons ascending over Hampstead
Geoffry Rhoades - Blackout
C H Rowe - Unemployment Assessment Board
Kenneth Rowntree - Wartime Hoardings
Maurice de Sausmarez - A Garden - God Wot
Edward Scroggie - Street Market
Beryl Sinclair - The Row
Elizabeth Spurr - Washing Day
Feliks Topolski - Drawing
William Townsend - W E A Meeting
Henry Trevick - The Fair
Kathleen Walker - The Mother’s Union in War Time
Carel Weight - Blockade
John Piper - The Font and Tortoise Stove: Britwell Salome
† Lynda Morris and Robert Radford - A.I.A. The Story of the Artists' International Association, 1999. p58
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transnames · 7 years ago
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Some two-syllable neutral names
(One-syllable names)
You can also combine initials, e.g. AJ, although this does not work for all initials and it can be gendered masculine.
A: Aaren, Abbott, Adair, Addi, Adren, Aerie, Afon, Aiden, Aiken, Ainsley, Alder, Alex, Ali, Alix, Alpha, Altair, Alto, Alton, Alva, Amal, Amore, Andy, Angel, Angie, Anise, Arbor, Ari, Ariel, Arlen, Arley, Arrow, Arya, Asa, Asher, Ashlen, Ashley, Ashton, Aspen, Aster, Aston, Aubrey, Auburn, Auden, August, Aura, Austin, Avery, Avis, Aviv, Avon, Aya, Ayan, Aza, Aze, Azure
B: Bailey, Baldwin, Banner, Barrett, Basil, Bauer, Baylor, Benson, Bentley, Berkley, Berry, Beryl, Billie, Birdie, Blakely, Bobbie, Booker, Bradley, Brady, Brayden, Brennan, Brewer, Briar, Brighton, Brinsley, Bronte, Brooklyn, Bryant
C: Cadence, Caelum, Calder, Camden, Cameron, Camille, Campbell, Canyon, Carey, Carlyle, Carmen, Carol, Carter, Cartwright, Carson, Casey, Cedar, Chandler, Chandra, Channing, Charlie, Charlton, Chatham, Cheyenne, Citron, Clancy, Claudie, Clover, Cobalt, Coby, Cohen, Coleson, Collins, Colver, Comet, Condor, Connell, Connie, Cooper, Coral, Corbin, Corin, Corey, Corley, Cortney, Cricket, Cyan, Cypress, Cyrille
D: Dallas, Dana, Dani, Darby, Darcy, Darrell, Darren, Denver, Devon, Diamond, Diaz, Dillon, Douglas, Dustin, Dusty, Dylan
E: Eagle, Early, Easton, Ebon, Echo, Eddie, Eden, Efe, Eiffel, Eissa, Elli, Ellis, Ellwood, Ember, Emer, Emerald, Emlyn, Emmett, Emry, Emryn, Enfys, Ennis, Eren, Errel, Essence, Esme, Evan, Ever, Everett, Eyrie, Ezra
F: Fable, Falco, Falcon, Fallon, Farah, Fargo, Farley, Farrell, Faulkner, Feldspar, Fennel, Fifer, Finley, Finney, Fiore, Fischer, Fletcher, Floren, Florence, Forest, Francis, Frankie, Freedom, Friday, Fulton
G: Gabi, Galen, Galway, Gannet, Garden, Gardner, Garey, Garland, Garnet, Gavi, Germaine, Gerry, Glenwood, Golden, Grady, Granite, Guthrie
H: Hadley, Halcyon, Hallow, Halo, Happy, Harbor, Harley, Harlow, Harper, Hartley, Haven, Hawking, Hayden, Henley, Heron, Hollis, Honor, Hopper, Hudson, Hunter
I: Iman, Imory, Indi, Innis, Io, Ira, Isa, Isha, Islet, Iver, Ivor, Ivory, Ivy, Izzy
J: Jacinth, Jackie, Jaden, Jael, Jalen, Jamie, Janis, Jarrah, Jarrell, Jasper, Jensen, Jessie, Joey, Jody, Jonquil, Jordan, Journey, July, Juneau, Junior, Juno, Justice
K: Kali, Kameron, Karey, Karson, Kasey, Kato, Keaton, Keegan, Keelan, Keenan, Kelby, Kellan, Keller, Kelly, Kelsey, Kendall, Kenyon, Kenzie, Kerry, Kestrel, Kevyn, Kieran, Kingsley, Kirby, Klaudie, Koby, Kody, Korbin, Korin, Korey, Krishna, Kyler
L: Laker, Lakyle, Lander, Landry, Laney, Langley, Larkin, Larkspur, Lashawn, Laurel, Laurence, Leighton, Lennox, Leopard, Leslie, Lethe, Lexie, Lexis, Linden, Lindsay, Lindy, Linnet, Logan, London, Loren, Luca, Lucky, Lyric
M: Maddox, Magic, Major, Malloy, Manu, Marley, Marlow, Martell, Marty, Mattie, Maury, Maurice, Maxie, Maxwell, Meadow, Mercer, Merlyn, Merritt, Merry, Micah, Mika, Miller, Misha, Monday, Morgan, Murphy, Murray, Myers
N: Narcisse, Nasim, Navdeep, Navy, Neal, Neptune, Neo, Nicky, Nico, Nika, Nike, Nimbus, Noam, Noel, Nori, Norris, Nouvel, Nova
O: Oakley, Oberon, Ocean, Odell, Ollie, Olive, Onyx, Opal, Ori, Oriole, Orion, Orrin, Osborne, Owen, Ozzie
P: Paisley, Paris, Parker, Pasco, Patience, Patrice, Paxton, Penrose, Pepper, Peregrine, Perrin, Perry, Peyton, Phelan, Phoenix, Piper, Placid, Porter, Prairie, Presley, Prosper
Q: Qaisar, Quarry, Quasar, Quetzal, Quila, Quincy, Quentin, Quillan
R: Raleigh, Rainbow, Rainer, Randy, Raven, Redmond, Regal, Regan, Reggie, Reynold, Rhythm, Ricki, Ridley, Riley, Rio, Rishi, River, Robbie, Robin, Ronnie, Rory, Roscoe, Rowan, Royal, Rudy, Ryder, Ryen, Rylen
S: Sabah, Sadler, Saffron, Salem, Samar, Sandy, Satchel, Saturn, Sasha, Sawyer, Saylor, Season, Selby, Seren, Seven, Sevy, Shale, Shannon, Shelby, Shelly, Shiloh, Sidney, Silver, Sinclair, Skylar, Skylark, Skyler, Snowdrop, Snowy, Soren, Sorrel, Sparrow, Spencer, Spirit, Springer, Stanley, Starling, Sterling, Summer, Sunday, Sunny, Sunshine, Sunset, Sutton
T: Taffy, Tali, Talon, Tanner, Tarian, Taylor, Teagan, Teddy, Tempest, Temple, Terry, Thursday, Tibby, Tiernan, Tiger, Timber, Tobin, Toby, Topaz, Torrey, Tracy, Trenton, Tristen, Tucker, Turner, Tuesday, Tully, Tyler, Tyson
U: Ulfie, Ulli, Ulri, Ulysse, Umber, Umbra, Upton, Urban, Uri, Ursa, Usher, Uta
V: Valen, Vega, Verdi, Vernon, Verrill, Vesper, Vivi, Vivien, Volta, Voltaire
W: Walker, Wallace, Waylan, Webster, Wednesday, Weston, Whimsy, Whitley, Whitney, Wilder, Willow, Wilson, Windsor, Windy, Winslow, Winter, Wisdom, Wolfram, Woody, Wylie
X: Xander, Xavie
Y: Yael, Yaven, Yannick, Yarrow, Yven
Z: Zailey, Zaki, Zander, Zandy, Zavi, Zelig, Zeno, Zephyr, Zero, Zevi, Zion,  Zohar, Zola, Zorey, Zuri
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aunqueudselocrea · 5 years ago
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LA PLACA DE LATON DE FRANCIS DRAKE …
Creian que lo de Oak Island era el unico misterio moderno de America ?
Pocos hallazgos han despertado tanto interés en América como el de una vieja placa de latón encontrada en la costa norte de la bahía de San Francisco en 1936. Un dependiente de tienda, Beryle Shinn, encontró la placa bajo una roca mientras participaba de una merienda campestre con sus compañeros. La cargó en su coche v la llevó a su casa. Allí permaneció olvidada, hasta que Shinn tropezó de nuevo con ella a principios de 1937. El joven dependiente limpió la placa con agua y jabón, y descubrió que contenía una inscripción; Shinn sólo consiguió descifrar la palabra «Drake».
Entonces Shinn telefoneó al doctor Herbert Bolton, profesor de historia en la Universidad de California, quien apenas podía dar crédito a sus oídos. La descripción que Shinn hizo de la placa y sobre todo el detalle de que en el objeto había un pequeño agujero sugirieron a Bolton la posibilidad de que se tratara de la célebre Placa de Latón, sobre la cual sir Francis Drake, según se decía, registró la anexión formal de Califomia (rebautizada por él con el nombre de Nova Albión) a Gran Bretaña en 1579. Según los relatos sobre el viaje que Drake hizo alrededor del mundo, la placa fue fijada a un gran poste y tenía en uno de sus costados un agujero, practicado a fin de que cupiese en él una moneda de seis peniques. La moneda muestra el rostro v el escudo de armas de la reina Isabel.
Shin envió la placa a Bolton, quien la limpió a fondo y descifró su inscripción grabada. Éste era el texto:
Para que sea conocido por todos los hombres, a través de la presente.
17 de junio de 1579 Por la gracia de Dios v en nombre de Su Majestad, la reina Isabel de Inglaterra y sus sucesores, para siempre tomo posesión de este reino, cuyo rey y pueblo renuncian libremente a sus derechos y titulo en toda esta tierra, en favor de la tutela de Sus Majestades. Esta tierra, desde ahora es llamada por mí y será conocida por todos los hombres como Nova Albión.
Francis Drake
Se comprobó que en el agujero del costado de la placa encajaba perfectamente una moneda isabelina de seis peniques. Y que los usos retóricos de la leyenda concordaban con los que estaban vigentes en la época en que la placa fue grabada. El doctor Bolton estaba convencido de la autenticidad de la pieza; pocas semanas más tarde anunció ante una asombrada asamblea de la Saciedad Histórica de California: «Aquí está, recuperada por fin después de un penado de 357 años. Miradla bien, porque es la Placa de Latón, la Placa de Drake: el más preciado tesoro arqueológico de California.» Las escépticos se apresuraron a poner en duda la autenticidad de la placa; señalaron que cualquier persona podía haber estudiado los relatos del viaje de Drake y grabado la inscripción en una antigua pieza de latón.
Los químicos de la Universidad de California, institución que compró la pieza arqueológica, sometieron la placa a pruebas exhaustivas durante siete meses. Luego dieron su dictamen: «En nuestra opinión, la placa de latón que hemos examinado es la auténtica placa que Drake menciona en su libro The World Encompassed, publicado en 1628.» Nadie puede estar completamente seguro de que la placa hallada por el dependiente de tienda sea la misma que colocó Drake. Pero se señala que sólo diez personas en el mundo eran suficientemente expertas en el inglés isabelino como para haber redactado la inscripción de aquella placa sin ningún error.
GOBIERNO DE U.S.A RECONOCE LEGALMENTE LA LLEGADA DE DRAKE A CALIFORNIA …
Point Reyes, el lugar de desembarco de Francis Drake en California
Sir Francis Drake (1540-1596) fue el terror de los mares caribeños de la época isabelina; vicealmirante, corsario, pirata a secas para una España que lo apodaba “El Draque”, también tuvo rol de explorador y reclamó California para Inglaterra. La controversia sobre en qué lugar de la Costa Oeste desembarcó se ha zanjado 433 años después. Tradicionalmente los historiadores han asegurado que el punto exacto era la península de Point Reyes en el norte de San Francisco. Otros apuntan a que Drake desembarcó en otros lugares de la costa del Pacífico: desde San Francisco, Oregón, la Columbia británica o incluso Alaska.
Quién ha resuelto definitivamente la disputa ha sido el secretario de interior estadounidense, Ken Salazar, que ha designado Point Reyes como la ensenada en la que arribó el Golden Hind de Drake. Este decretazo forma parte de una iniciativa que ha definido los 27 sitios históricos que “poseen un valor excepcional en ilustrar e interpretar la historia de Estados Unidos”. Los historiadores han apoyado la decisión de Salazar, mientras que los aficionados y los cronistas amateurs de toda la Costa Oeste “barren para casa” al asegurar que el pirata desembarcó en otros puntos.
Tras saquear zonas de Brasil, el Río de la Plata, Valparaíso y 25.000 pesos de oro peruano, Drake puso rumbo al norte por la costa del Pacífico, más allá de Nueva España. El Golden Hind necesitaba reparación urgente, por lo que el 17 de junio de 1579 tocó tierra para remozar su embarcación. La tripulación dejó clavada una placa de bronce reclamando esas tierras para la reina Isabel I y tuvo contacto con los nativos, posiblemente del pueblo Miwok. En los diarios de Drake se cuenta que encontró un buen puerto natural, protegido de los vientos del oeste y de la niebla. Drake la llamaba fogges y le recordó a Inglaterra, por lo que la llamó Nova Albión, como el antiguo nombre de Gran Bretaña. Se dice que dejó algunos hombres como colonos. El punto preciso fue alterado en los mapas para que no lo descubrieran los españoles. Realmente todo rastro se perdió cuando se quemó el palacio de Whitehall en 1698. Una vez reparado el barco zarparon rumbo a casa circunvalando mundo.
ALGUNAS CONCLUSIONES NUESTRAS…
Drake fue un aventurero,corsario..o sea un pirata,un ave rapaz apañado y enviado por la corona inglesa que patrocino sus exploraciones para descubrir islas y cartografiarlas y reclamarlas para los ingleses y dejaba un pequeño fuerte con bandera,pergaminos y placas y sobretodo PARA SAQUEAR LO QUE HALLABA… para muestra basta un boton SAQUEO PERU Y CHILE A SU PASO..
La politica del proteccionismo con invasion colonial y establecimiento de la poblacion local como salvajes y cipayos y la obligacion de impulsar el idioma ingles y su cultura,como por ejemplo en Australia,Nueva Zelandia y Chile..
NORTEAMERICA siempre fue la apuesta fuerte o el paraiso utopico de Israel e Inglaterra…sus 13 colonias,el simbolismo masonico en simbolos nacionales y dolar y la pertenencia de presidentes y notables a la masoneria y logias esotericas…
El codigo basico de los skull and bones,logia politica de yale que forma a los presidentes de Usa,ya era practicado por Drake,la organizacion en circulos de rapiña,la intriga y el verdadero poder oculto en manos no visibles ni democraticas y que el poder se conserve por cargos y negocios entre los descendientes…dinastias de poder consanguineo que establecio el actual orden economico y politico a traves de las 13 familias que emparentan a politicos,banqueros,empresarios,reyes y nobleza entre si….
De hecho en ambientes donde la elite y nobleza del poder se reune como BOHEMIAN GROOVE Y BILDERBERG y SKULL AND BONES rinden culto y reconocimiento a los antiguos o mentores como Drake…
Asi como paises como Cuba o Uruguay muestran orgullo de tener como ancestros,heroes o proceres a escritores como Jose Marti y Rodo y los 33 orientales,paises como Inglaterra y Usa buscan con orgullo ser descendientes de personajes como Robin Hood,Drake,el pirata Morgan y otros…reclamando asi su filosofia como es el colonialismo y el pillaje ya sea en islas o robando frontera mexicana o comprando Alaska a los rusos por monedas y la guerra de rapiña de recursos en Afganistan,Irak,Libia,Egipto,los Balcanes,Haiti y Ucrania….
Drake integraba las organizaciones protomasonicas llamadas royal landmarks y era un conquistador que ponia el gancho en una tierra para que despues vinieran las oleadas de colonia e infiltren y se hagan cargo del gobierno saqueando los recursos y sostenuendose con intrigas y crimenes vergonzosos..
EL ACARREO DE ESCLAVOS DE AFRICA causo la muerte de 200 millones de negros traidos como animales por flotas de barcos hacia firmas de negocio y mercado de esclavos siempre bajo el mando de banqueros-traficantes de familias Gringas de sangre de lo que hoy seria zionismo…los vanderbilt y sinclair y hundrell… La masacre en china de miles de rebeldes boxers en 55 dias en Pekin… Las matanzas en La India y la epopeya de Gandhi… Las miles de bajas de construccion del canal de Panama que siempre controlo Usa y sus cipayos…
No es cosa nueva de hoy….India y Afganistan…Hong Kong e Irak..es la misma forma y bajo las mismas familias…bajo el codigo corsario y Usa saca un decreto declarandose orgulloso del acceso de Drake y su ascendencia…
otro boton de muestra ? Disney con su representatividad y poder formador de opinion publica hace 2 peliculas con sendo presupuesto y reparto..
La leyenda del tesoro perdido y su secuela donde se hablan maravillas de la masoneria y donde Usa reclama el orgullo de descender de estas logias…
Ademas Disney y demas medios a traves de clips y simbolos usan justamente el simbolismo subliminal masonico…hoy todas las empresas tienen logos masonicos y los artistas y films usan el simbolismo y justamente bancos,empresas y gobiernos se comportan segun el codigo pirata de monopolio,intriga,corrupcion y lineas sucesorias dinasticas…
La pertenencia de Drake a esta nobleza perversa esta documentada en grabados que conmemoran cuando la reina lo ungio con la espada como sir y en consecuencia iniciado y participe de los planes de las lineas dinasticas y por ende iniciado en circulos como los landmarks protomasonicos y que Drake conocio los planes de la corona y la elite y fue uno de los iniciadores de este orden mundial del eje Israel-Inglaterra-Usa y este plan centenario sigue vigente y aplicandose tal cual como vemos en Ucrania y Gaza donde suceden las peores atrocidades bajo el silencio genuflexo y complice de Inglaterra y Usa…
Drake fue un eslabon de esta cadena de sangre,oro,dinero y poder,en otras notas ahondaremos en la nobleza y sus organizaciones,por ahora lo dicho es suficiente…
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johnbrace · 8 years ago
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Election Result (Wirral Council, 2017): Claughton: Labour hold (Gillian Wood)
Election Result (Wirral Council, 2017): Claughton: Labour hold (Gillian Wood)
Election Result (Wirral Council, 2017): Claughton: Labour hold (Gillian Wood)                                   Polling station 4th May 2017 resized At the time of writing, this is a placeholder page for the result. A result is expected around noon on 5th May 2017. Please note we would have been happier reporting from the count centre about half a mile away but Wirral Council were not happy with…
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