”there’s no glory in suffering” and “sometimes the effort is the point” are two ideas that co-exist but god damn if I can ever tell when’s the time for which
Stranger Things

titsay
Game of Thrones Daily

No title available

pixel skylines

Discoholic 🪩
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
🪼
No title available
NASA
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.
KIROKAZE
DEAR READER

shark vs the universe
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Xuebing Du

ellievsbear

★

Kiana Khansmith

seen from Brazil
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Jamaica
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from Colombia

seen from Malaysia

seen from South Africa
seen from United States
@agarthanmuseum
”there’s no glory in suffering” and “sometimes the effort is the point” are two ideas that co-exist but god damn if I can ever tell when’s the time for which
Hedy Yang, On the Horizon
Unusual ship names
In the course of time, some quite funny names have emerged, such as HMS Pickle, HMS Beaver, HMS Black Joke or HMS Sandwich. But there are a few others that I don't want to withhold from you.
Falcon in the Fetterlock, English Warship mid 16th century
Three Ostrich Feathers, English Merchant, mid16th century
Bull, Bear and Horse, English Merchant, early 17th century
Mousenest, English Fireship, mid 17th century
Blade of Wheat, English Merchant, late 17th century
Who's afraid, English Privateer, late 18th century
Sturdy Beggar, Salem Privateer, late 18th century
Terrible, English Privateer, late 18th century
Mouse of the Mountain, Hudson River Steamer, early 19th century
Grumbler and Growler, Salem Privateer, early 19th century
Precious Ridicule, New Orleans schooner, early 19th century
Free Love, Mississippi Barque, early 19th century
Catch me who can, Baltimore Privateer, early 19th century
The Twenty - Sixth Day of October 1812, English Schooner, early 19th century
Go ask Her, Neufundland Schooner, early 19th century
Brown Smith Jones, Maryland Police Boat, late 19th century
Essence of Pepermint, Nova Scotia Schooner, late 19th century
even more land fish
julian de narvaez piranesi illustration i will think about you every day for the rest of my life
warming carafe with a stained glass pattern (ca. late 50s-early 60s)
‘i’ll name it to tame it’
There are few delights in the world like having a friend start to read Jane Eyre for the first time and then as they are commenting on it you slowly realize that they don't know. They don't know Rochester's deal.
This is like the literary equivalent of meeting someone who doesn't know Darth Vader is Luke's father.
So they go "I don't understand why anyone would have a problem with this relationship! Yeah he's older and there is a class/power difference but he clearly respects her as a person and it's so refreshing!" and you just cackle, cackle, cackle behind your screen until the inevitable day you get this message.
Everyone congratulate my friend @anonymoustypewriter, they just found out one of literature's biggest 100+ year old shock twists authentically without anyone spoiling it for them.
Colors vs Final Illustration <3
I wanted to give folks here a heads up that I've deleted my Redbubble account (they added a crappy fee structure + they've never been good at paying artists fairly), so if you want prints you should use my Inprnt. Thanks!
Commissions are currently open; email at [email protected] for inquiries.
Some of the contents of the north room of a blacksmith's house on Concord Road in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1785.
I'm turning the entire probate court inventory/assessment of his belongings into an (approximately) 15-page zine. So far, I'm about halfway done.
I love this project. It feels like I'm snooping through someone's house or poking around an estate sale, and I'm having a lot of fun researching the objects and looking up period examples in museum collections and antiques auction sites.
lacuna mutata
[... ] a wonderful phrase
lacuna mutata
aint no [... ] craze
it means textual emendations
for the rest of your days
it's a source [...] free
ambiguity
lac[... ]
A little announcement for my fellow Musketeers Enjoyers ! I've had the pleasure to illustrate a luxury french edition of the Three Musketeers with a box and gold foil dust jacket and you can preorder it right now !
The collection also includes Picture of Dorian Gray and Pride and Prejudice, illustrated respectively by Anaïs Flogny and Anouck Faure. It's produced by an independent team of editors and all made in Europe.
Check out the preorder & share it around if you feel like it !
Remembering Conrad Veidt on the anniversary of his death (April 3, 1943)
Bird man Cesare package.
The Land of Froud - art by Brian Froud (1976)