#butch hijabi
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
omnist-angels · 9 months ago
Text
Hello. Are there any other butches that veil in here. Please send a signal. What are your favorite styles
61 notes · View notes
littlevelvette · 1 year ago
Text
I need flowy clothing access wisdom from butch hijabis pls!!! I am not very heat tolerant already and also do not wish to be particularly feminine in presentation. Calling any Black butch hijabis for help pls!!!
3 notes · View notes
pinkcultgirl · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
completely unrelated comic pages dump :3
53 notes · View notes
doeeyeddyke · 7 months ago
Text
.
#having a. being queer brown Muslim thoughts. moment.#I stopped using the word butch for myself bc no one will accept it and just carefully use dyke instead bc dyke can be used more generally b#like I get the criticism of the evasion of depicting masculine women/lesbians in media and stuff#like that tweet with some girl in a leather jacket and it's captioned smth about how this is the max butch level ppl can handle etc etc I s#ik what masculine women look like ik what butches look like and ik how the world shies away from it#I'm not a woman i'm nonbinary and I'm not 100% masculine but i definitely identify with masculinity to a certain extent etc if that makes s#but like. idk. my relationship with masculinity is weird and part of it has to do with my difficulty seeing myself in white/American butche#they are so gorgeous and I'm so elated always to see very masculine women and queer ppl etc but just. look. I'm never going to dress or loo#like i don't think I even want to look exactly like all the masculine androgynous butch women lesbians queer ppl etc i've met some things I#but I was perfectly content with saying I was masculine or butch in my burqa except not anymore bc i'm considered particularly feminine for#idk there's lots of thoughts and feelings that I can't all get out it just sucks how I always have to be careful with what I call myself#bc I “can't�� be certain things or I run the risk of facing antagonism by virtue of being hijabi and not the american kind of masculine#ppl are weird enough when they think i'm an ally and then I say I'm gay and that's like “oh....”#and any more than that is worse or just outright rejected bc it's not right or I'm using the wrong words bc i'm not looking or doing it rig#idk if any of this is coherent but yea. yea idk. it sucks.
7 notes · View notes
halalgirlmeg · 2 years ago
Text
Sometimes I wanna go out looking sexy but like, in a way that only certain people can see me
12 notes · View notes
goldyke · 2 years ago
Text
You know who I love? Butches who wear culturally significant men’s clothing because honoring their experience with gender honors their culture
You know who else I live? Butches who wear culturally significant women’s clothing because honoring their cultural experience honors their gender expression
10 notes · View notes
many-sparrows · 7 months ago
Text
I'm very tired of this "queer college students should stop supporting Palestine, they'd kill you there!" I watched a hijabi ask a trans man, "but what name do you want to go by?" A butch giving a woman their hoodie so that she could keep her hair covered after the cops took her scarf. Muslim girls making sure the lesbian couple got through the system together. Religious men making sure purple haired protestors got out safe. I don't want to hear it. Solidarity forever, free Palestine.
87K notes · View notes
cottonginandjuice · 4 months ago
Text
Been back single for like 3ish months now. I do not know how dating stuff works anymore. I found myself in a precarious situation this week.
I met a new friend but things turned kinda flirty. And now, boom, we want to know each other carnally. But, bam, she's a high-femme / pillow princess. I'm not cut out for that dynamic long term, but I'm tempted to fuck around and find out.
0 notes
thefloweredblade · 11 months ago
Text
I love lesbians I love Butch lesbians I love femme lesbians I love stud lesbians I love androgynous lesbians I love she/her lesbians I love he/him lesbians I love they/them lesbians I love multipronoun lesbians I love neopronouns lesbians I love cis lesbians I love trans lesbians I love nonbinary lesbians I love two-spirit lesbians I love older lesbians I love younger lesbians I love I love atheist lesbians I love religious lesbians I love buff lesbians I love skinny lesbians I love fat lesbians I love disabled lesbians I love BIPOC lesbians I love hairy lesbians I love bald lesbians I love ace lesbians I love aro lesbians I love dom lesbians I love sub lesbians I love nerdy lesbians I love artistic lesbians I love academic lesbians I love rich lesbians I love poor lesbians I love flamboyant lesbians I love hijabi lesbians I love niqabi lesbians I love veiled lesbians I love out lesbians I love closeted lesbians I love shy lesbians I love out going lesbians I love witchy lesbians I love questioning lesbians I love lesbians with a different romantic label I love lesbians with a different sexual label I love historical lesbians I love future lesbians
I love lesbians and anyone sapphic/trixic mwah mwah mwah
225 notes · View notes
haveyoureadthispoll · 9 months ago
Text
A queer hijabi Muslim immigrant survives her coming-of-age by drawing strength and hope from stories in the Quran in this daring, provocative, and radically hopeful memoir. When fourteen-year-old Lamya H realizes she has a crush on her teacher--her female teacher--she covers up her attraction, an attraction she can't yet name, by playing up her roles as overachiever and class clown. Born in South Asia, she moved to the Middle East at a young age and has spent years feeling out of place, like her own desires and dreams don't matter, and it's easier to hide in plain sight. To disappear. But one day in Quran class, she reads a passage about Maryam that changes everything: when Maryam learned that she was pregnant, she insisted no man had touched her. Could Maryam, uninterested in men, be . . . like Lamya? From that moment on, Lamya makes sense of her struggles and triumphs by comparing her experiences with some of the most famous stories in the Quran. She juxtaposes her coming out with Musa liberating his people from the pharoah; asks if Allah, who is neither male nor female, might instead be nonbinary; and, drawing on the faith and hope Nuh needed to construct his ark, begins to build a life of her own--ultimately finding that the answer to her lifelong quest for community and belonging lies in owning her identity as a queer, devout Muslim immigrant. This searingly intimate memoir in essays, spanning Lamya's childhood to her arrival in the United States for college through early-adult life in New York City, tells a universal story of courage, trust, and love, celebrating what it means to be a seeker and an architect of one's own life.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
134 notes · View notes
fagboyfriend · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
recently realized i never officially posted the third peice in the t4t house party trilogy. You may have seen some of these, but they’re kinda meant as a set…. i may make more but. these are the big three.
[ID: Three images. All are traditional illustrations on paper with vibrant color.
The first is in watercolor, gouache and ink. It is of a crowded party with overlapping figures. The composition is chaotic and colorful. Notably, a person with choppy green hair and a yellow cane stands in the center. Around them, a couple embraces, a person lies with their legs up in the air, a woman sits on a chair, a pile of cups and drinks towers over the partygoers, and another person reclines while sipping from a cup. the figures and background overlap and stack upon eachother.
the second is a traditional watercolor and ink painting. A crowded house party full of trans people takes place. In the foreground, a pair of legs wearing brightly colored pants lean on a sofa while someone unbuttons their jeans. A woman stands in a fur coat with a scarf in her hand. Two men kiss passionatly. Some people chat in the background while one person stands alone and confused. The peice uses neon and neutral tones, the whole peice warm in color.
The third is A colored pencil drawing done on green toned paper. The image has a select color pallete, with the main tones in the image being pink, magenta, crimson, greyish green, a very pale light green, and a deep viridian. Six characters interact at a party. In closest veiw, a face of a smiling person with butterfly locs and glasses takes up a large part of the bottom corner of the image. Moving back, two people, a pink haired pale person, and a south asian man with forearm crutches lounge on a couch. The man seems to be the center of the page, and is smiling, others around him appearing to be laughing at something he said. He has a star shaped symbol covering one of his eyes. Behind the couch, another man with shaggy white hair and a phalloplasty scar stands frozen, holding a drink. He is looking at the lounging man, and he also has a star covering one of his eyes. Behind them, two women, a hijabi wearing a shirt that reads ‘butch dyke’ and a black woman wearing pink overalls talk. All of the people stand in an apartment, the walls covered in paintings as well as a large fireplace.
End ID.]
274 notes · View notes
rotzaprachim · 4 months ago
Text
so many convos on (my religion does this …) (my culture does this..) are so regional too like on the whole I haven’t had personal issues with tznius and used to be more *typically* tznius observant and enjoyed it. But like, people will also post away on Twitter about how Jews don’t have a problem with modesty culture or whatever, and those people are largely us Jews from outside orthodoxy, and I have this realllly strong memory of visiting a Judaica shop in a European Jewish neighborhood to buy Kippot and a Magen David. I was wearing an outfit I thought was very modest but which had loose boyfriend style jeans and a kind of slouchy sweater and turtleneck that was a pretty typical masorti girl fashion moment, but when I went into the shop both the old man behind the counter and the little boys looked at me like I was from Mars for wearing pants into an orthodox space and my orthodox friend (just as much *showing* as me but a skirt) had to be an interlocutor between me and them and told me not to buy a kippah there or try it on at all, it has to be for my Brother. Idk it’s kind of a strange dirty laundry moment I don’t like sharing with goyim OR with a lot of Jews who don’t have experience in these denominations, but it’s kind of. Scratched into my head, esp as that’s the reality of a lot of smaller portions of the diaspora if you want to engage in religious or cultural observance at all. there’s nothing like a seven year old judging you for being a whore lol
for the uninitiated: (orthodox) Judaism can have complex issues with modesty rulings cause it isn’t just about PHYSICAL modesty but the issue of social modesty: women have to dress *like women* and men have to dress *like men.* so this is part of the ruling on the issue in some orthodoxy communities that women can’t wear pants, because pants are for Men, and that’s men’s wear. So a lot of judgement isn’t or isn’t solely that you’re Showing Too Much Off and it’s sexual (though it can be that!!!) but that you’re looking like a man, and can prompt all kinds of inquiries into just *how* feminine a girl is looking. That’s why a woman who seems to be *showing* a lot more but is wearing a skirt and a very feminine hairdo may be judged more harshly than one who is more physically covered and wearing pants. This leads to all other fascinating areas: the general butch look is often *physically modest* but not *feminine*, whereas pants that *obviously* are Not For Men are often more physically revealing and show off curves. It’s part of how tznius is to my understanding different from hijab, but that extends to there being things permissible to many hijabis that might not be permissible to many tsnius observant communities, such as pants or mainstream “men’s clothes” in women’s department stores
26 notes · View notes
queer-book-society · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Title: Hijab Butch Blues: A Memoir
By: Lamya H.
Description: A queer hijabi Muslim immigrant survives her coming-of-age by drawing strength and hope from stories in the Quran in this daring, provocative, and radically hopeful memoir.
31 notes · View notes
jesncin · 7 months ago
Note
Did your character designs for Lunar Boy go through any fun changes?
Yes they did! Lunar Boy took 4 years to write and draw, and we were developing it long before that too! A lot of the characters went through story and visual changes, mainly in terms of fashion. I pitched Lunar Boy in class with one of the goals to be more fashion-conscious in character design (and maybe as a vessel for exploring my own identity in the process). I think the most prominent one being Aminah (the trans girl mentor of our titular Lunar Boy):
Tumblr media
She was originally much older (like a graduate), and more punk-leaning, with a shaved head and sleeveless denim (and leggings?? why oh why past-me). As we got a hold of the color schemes in middle-grade, we toned down the darker colors in the cast for brighter more inviting colors fashion-wise. Aminah evolved to being more of a butch beach girl, because we wanted her to be sportier and wear looser clothes to combat the Southeast Asian heat lol. As she was aged down to be more of a high schooler, we figured it would make more sense if she was more jock-like. She now sports an outgrown undercut with a mullet. And that's where her design ended up!
Tumblr media
Other characters went through similar things. Dariya (Lunar Boy's mom) got more personalized hijabi fashion, I gave Indu more than just hoodies to wear, there were originally three step sisters but for story reasons they got fused into one sister and she became an amalgamation of all of them.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I think out of the characters, Alon (angsty step brother) probably stayed the most consistent. We had a very specific look in mind for him. So yeah! A fraction of the many changes that happens when a graphic novel is in the oven for so long, haha. Thank you for asking, I hope you'll enjoy Lunar Boy once it comes out on the 14th of May!
35 notes · View notes
walrus150915 · 1 year ago
Text
Hey it's been a while I posted here right
I have my own reasons for that (school) SO UMMM SORRY FOR NOT BEING HERE THAT OFTEN!!!!
The meal I made for you today has been cooking in my head for a while actually but the reason I post it now is bc I saw a post of one artist I follow who drew genderbent Goldenheart and!!!! Let me say!!!! My hand slipped
How I think Ballister and Ambrosius would look as women (let's go lesbians let's go)
Tumblr media
I am deeply sorry for messing up Goldenloin's armour, I confused two shades of yellow😭
Basically no changes except the facial hair?? Oh yep and Ballister's a hijabi😎
Tumblr media
I have thought about whether I should make Boldheart wear hijab but the idea to draw it as an upside-down shield (shield is Ballister's symbol according to the artbook) won me over😭 plus I made it look like his own hair shape from the side!
Drawing Ballister's face without his moustache was a challenge tbh😭😭 his facial hair is what completes his look and he looks weird without it
This little thing I made grey in the drawing? It's not hair, it's the first fabric under the brown one. I wanted it to resemble Ballister's haircut but also like not really
Now, to Ambrosius ig???
Tumblr media
Nothing too complicated, it's basically him but with bigger chest and some resemblance of hips (have you seen my man? His cake so small it isn't even a cake)
I also like the idea of longer hair but like. You can't take away lesbian's undercut, she will collapse to the floor and dissolve
Idk guys imo if Ambrosius were a woman he'd be a soft butch or something ajzjajjeje😭😭😭
Tumblr media Tumblr media
These lovelies together bcuz of course. Nothing is as lesbian as chopping your lover's arm off
(If you think about it, original Goldenheart is already yuri enough)
So ummm yeah that's the end of the post. I have a fic to finish and a long night to spend, hope you enjoyed! <333
45 notes · View notes
nerves-nebula · 8 months ago
Text
couldnt find this book on monsters & dehumanization on the libby app HOWEVER!!! I GOT IT THROUGH HOOPLA!!! LETS GO GAMERRRSSSS i mean i gotta finish hood feminism and hijabi butch blues first STILL !!!! IM EXCITED THIS IS LIKE ONE OF MY FAVORITE SUBJECT MATTERS TO THINK ABOUT AAA
21 notes · View notes