Hairy Hippie Chicks

Hairy Hippie Chicks




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Hairy Hippie Chicks

some of these girlz would actually be hot if it wasn't for the... you know.


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BHURNA SMOKE




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Go watch the videoclip boys boys boys from Sabrina... you'll see hairy pits there too!!!!

didnt see any hairy pits. but the nipp slips where awesome! haha

OMFG, I'm undecided on #29 .... mixed emotions of arousal and projectile vomiting!!!

I don't understand this... I doubt any of them speak English... dirty Europeans.

Didn't see a decent looking one anywhere!

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Photos of Naked Hippies and Stylish Radicals in Milan
The Proletarian Youth Festival in the Parco Lambro attracted feminists, hippies and militant lefties who all loved getting naked.
ORIGINAL REPORTING ON EVERYTHING THAT MATTERS IN YOUR INBOX.
This article originally appeared on VICE Italy
These days Parco Lambro might be like any other park in Milan, but in the 70s, it was the setting for one of the biggest Italian cultural breakthroughs: the Festival del Proletariato Giovanile [Proletarian Youth Festival].
The annual music festival was organised by underground zine Re Nudo from 1971 until 1976, and the last three editions were held in Parco Lambro in Milan. For a few days each year, the park was home to emerging and established performers, feminists, commune enthusiasts, hippies, militant lefties and curious passersby. The last edition in 1976 was attended by over 400,000 people, which was when the whole thing became a bit unmanageable.
At the time, Dino Fracchia was young, unemployed and living in Milan. He went to all three editions of the festival in his city and brought his camera to the last two of them. That resulted in 250 photos that are now, 40 years after the festival ended, celebrated in a book and an exhibition.
With the exhibition, curator Matteo Balduzzi wants to show that the city of Milan lived through moments like this before becoming what we now know – a white collar metropolitan city filled with fashion addicts and tourists. But Fracchia's work, the book or the exhibition aren't meant as a political statement. "We decided to exhibit all the photos in the book – without exceptions – to show what daily life inside the park was like during those few days a year," Balduzzi explains. "You get to see both the exciting, funny moments and the boring ones – moments of true freedom and moments completely unrelated to the context. For example: there were a lot of soldiers on leave who would just get bored and come to Parco Lambro to watch the naked girls. There were other real voyeurs too, or people who weren't part of any movement but just wanted to have a look."
I giorni del Parco Lambro - Continuous days, Milano 29/07/1975 - 26/06/1976 will be open until September 8th at the Forma Meravigli exhibition centre, Via Meravigli 5, Milan.
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London: Squatters being evicted from Piccadilly mansion. September 22, 1969 p9
The good vibrations in San Francisco's Civic Center. Unnamed couple. July 13, 1968
Haight & Ashbury meeting on street corner. October 29, 1973
Bob Weir greets the crowd as the police bust the Grateful Dead house at 710 Ashbury.
Authentic 'Summer of Love' hippies in the Haight as well as ...
Subject and exact San Francisco location unknown. January 25, 1970
Laundry and bath day at Wheeler's Ranch near Bodega Bay, CA., July 27, 1970.
Laundry and bath day at Wheeler's Ranch near Bodega Bay, CA., July 27, 1970.
Lt. James Ludow, of Park Police Station on the edge of the Haight-Ashbury district, adds another face to the bulletin board of missing children, Oct. 12, 1967, San Francisco, Calif. The photos are sent in by parents from all over the country. During the first six months of 1967, 748 juvenile runaways were picked up by police; despite the reports of at the hippie colony is disintegrating. Patrolman Leo Maguire, not shown, says instead of staying home and studying the three Rs, these kids come to Haight-Ashbury and study the three Ds; dope, disease and despair.
Michael Bry's photograph of peace marchers in San Francisco.
Boulder, Colo: A group of hippies predicting the world will come to an end on sit calmly around the campfire on top of Sugar Loaf Mountain.
The intersection of Haight and Ashbury Streets was a beacon for thousands of hippies, thrill-seekers, and the simply-curious during the Summer of Love in San Francisco, California, in early summer, 1967.
Bearded and mustached Hippie at anti-war demonstration in Golden Gate Park.
"Today" with flute, next to Cynthia, at Wheeler's Ranch in Bodega Bay, CA July 27, 1970
Hippies dawdle at the corner of Haight and Ashbury Streets, the epicenter of the Summer of Love, in San Francisco, California, on May 4, 1967.
Social History, San Francisco, California, USA, 6th October 1967. More than 100 hippies hold rites celebrating the "Death of the Hippie" as they parade down Haight Street, center of the famed Haight-Ashbury district, carrying a symbolic casket in a protest against being labeled "hippies." (Photo by Rolls Press/Popperfoto/Getty Images)
Carrying a loaf of bread, a guitar and a knapsack, a hippie walks down the street away from the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, Oct. 16, 1967. As the last of the summer weather moves out, so does the influx of young people that came in with it. (AP Photo)
Grandby, Colo: Joy and Love overflow - The young people present for the religious festival at Strawberry Lake, 1972. It was promoted by the Rainbow Family of Love and Living Life from Eugene, OR. Sargent Pepper, the Great Dane manages to pack his own.
Greer's Ferry, Ark: Members of The Group commune seem to be having an enjoyable time at a recent meeting. New York Times photo by Gary Settle Sunday Punch, October 7, 1973
Hippies lounge in front of a local establishment in the Haight-Ashbury disctrict in San Francisco, California, in the early summer, 1967. (Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
Hippies dance at a psychedelic rock concert at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco, California, early summer, 1967.
Janis Joplin. Photo by Greg Peterson Symbol of hippie, rock music, drug culture in Haight District of SF in the 1960's.
May 15, 1967 β€” As part of his month-long stint as an embedded reporter in San Francisco's hippie scene, George Gilbert writes about life on the street in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood. "I did not find one person, in my month of hippie life, who had not smoked marijuana or taken LSD," writes Gilbert. He characterizes the city's hippies as "children of world crises, acutely aware the whole thing could disappear in a nuclear flash."
1967: Folk singer Joan Baez sits on the sidewalk at the corner of Haight and Ashbury and serenades hippies and tourists in a spontaneous concert with a borrowed guitar. The concert was part of the wealthy singer's four-day visit to the place of origin of the hippies subculture of bare feet, sandals, beards, LSD and marijuana. Also?during her visit she worked at the Haight-Ashbury Free Medical Clinic as a volunteer file clerk.
May 25, 1968 Beats & Hippies S.F. has the oldest known Haightus Ashburius who turned up in the well known San Francisco neighborhood about a month ago and sells newspapers for his bread. He joyfully posed with a younger member of the species who says she has been here three years, four months and three days--which qualifies her as a veteran of the ambrosia set. The old-timer has only one hang-up--nobody trusts him because he's over thirty!
Raid Beats & Hippies at Psychedelic Shop, 1966.
In this photo, taken during the sixties, a member of an organization called "The Diggers" hands out free food at a distribution center in the Haight-Ashbury.
San Francisco 1966 Beat Generation, Hippies Trips Festival, Psychedelic Dancers Thrift Shop Fashions May 29, 1966
San Francisco July 19, 1968 Pursued, Pursuers and Spectators--A group of hippies stare from the window of their pad as another trips and falls to the ground while being pursued by the police during a third night of violence and shooting in San Francisco's famed Haight-Ashbury district. At least one person was shot, one injured and a number of fire bombs thrown last night.


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From music festivals to sit-ins to camping out, anyone who was a teenager or young adult during the late ’60s and early ’70s had the chance to partake in a new kind of movement happening. The new wave of celebration, informality, and individual expression left a lasting impression on American culture in ways that we are still feeling today. And, there were some pretty far out photos taken of it all unfolding. Have a look back with us at 18 wild photos of hippies from the ’60s and ’70s.
By the mid-’70s many aspects of hippie culture had either been left behind after the Vietnam War ended (like protests) or had been incorporated into the mainstream (like bellbottoms and long hair). For a rare short window of time, though, hippie culture was an un-commodified movement which swept across the globe. This unique time period was a push-pull of ideologies, seen nowhere more apparent than in these photos of kids from the era.

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