enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Kuchisake-onna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuchisake-onna

    Glasgow smile; Japanese urban legends, enduring modern Japanese folktales; La Llorona, the ghost of a woman in Latin American folklore; Madam Koi Koi, an African urban legend about the ghost of a dead teacher; Ouni, a Japanese yōkai with a face like that of a demon woman (kijo) torn from mouth to ear

  3. Smiling Girl, a Courtesan, Holding an Obscene Image

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smiling_Girl,_a_Courtesan...

    Smiling Girl, a Courtesan, Holding an Obscene Image (1625) by Gerard van Honthorst. Smiling Girl, a Courtesan, Holding an Obscene Image, also known in Dutch as Een Laggende Vrouw met een naakte Pourtraitje in de Hand, waar onder divisje staat ("A laughing woman holding a small picture of a nude in her hand, under which is a motto") or Jonge vrouw met een medaillon ("Young Woman with a ...

  4. Smiling Girl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smiling_Girl

    The Smiling Girl, formerly thought to be by Johannes Vermeer, was donated by collector Andrew W. Mellon in 1937 to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. Now widely considered to be a fake, the painting was deemed by the Vermeer expert Arthur K. Wheelock Jr. in a 1995 study to be by a 20th-century artist and forger, Theo van Wijngaarden, a friend of Han van Meegeren.

  5. Carved: The Slit-Mouthed Woman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carved:_The_Slit-Mouthed_Woman

    As Kuchisake-onna leaves with Mika, Mika knocks her mask off, revealing the woman's disfigured face. At school, Noboru shows Kyōko a thirty-year-old photograph of a woman who looks like Kuchisake-onna. Noboru hears the voice again and traces it to a house, and he and Kyōko save a boy from Kuchisake-onna, whom Kyōko seemingly kills with a knife.

  6. Keith Hunter Jesperson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Hunter_Jesperson

    Keith Hunter Jesperson (born April 6, 1955) is a Canadian-American serial killer who murdered at least eight women in the United States during the early 1990s. He was known as the Happy Face Killer because he drew smiley faces on his many letters to the media and authorities.

  7. Manga iconography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manga_iconography

    While the art can be realistic or cartoonish, characters often have large eyes (female characters usually have larger eyes than male characters), small noses, tiny mouths, and flat faces. Psychological and social research on facial attractiveness has pointed out that the presence of childlike, neotenous facial features increases attractiveness. [1]

  8. AOL Mail

    mail.aol.com/?icid=aol.com-nav

    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

  9. Smiley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smiley

    Draw a big smiley face on the plate!" [22] A year later, there was an illustration of a noseless smiling face containing two dots, eyebrows, and a single curved line for a mouth in a write-up in Family Weekly Magazine, Galloping Ghosts! by Bill Ross with the text: "Collect six empty pop bottles and six cone-shaped paper cups.