Literally no excuse ^^^
Also like… Half the characters from cowboy beebop are black or dark skinned.
So git gud
@creatingblackcharacters
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Janaina Medeiros

No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

blake kathryn
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

★

Kaledo Art
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
taylor price

Product Placement

Kiana Khansmith
i don't do bad sauce passes
Show & Tell
Jules of Nature
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Sade Olutola

JBB: An Artblog!
h

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
seen from Germany
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@aleurendt
Literally no excuse ^^^
Also like… Half the characters from cowboy beebop are black or dark skinned.
So git gud
@creatingblackcharacters
Mark Ferrari's 1990s pixel art series, Living Worlds
Common Grackle by David Sibley 
Hey everyone! This series of pride themed mythological buddies will become a stickerset I am already producing.
They are ONLY available for FREE for people who join my email list and support my successful Kickstarter in July! (Don't worry, I will only use the email list to inform you when the Kickstarter launches so you won't miss it :D)
The planned Kickstarter is aiming to turn these pretty fellas into hard enamel pins, so you wouldn't just help me bring these pretty guys into reality but also be rewarded with these handcrafted sticker.
Curious? Intrigued even? Then please follow the link for more info and feel free to sign up to our mailing list to stay up to date when we LAUNCH OUR KICKSTARTER IN JULY!
LINK:
Our Kickstarter Prelaunch Page:
A collection of Pride themed Coat of Arms Enamel Pins. Rally your friends, choose your crest and celebrate with PRIDE.
Sometimes I like to think about the League of Villains (when they were dirt poor) discovering that Dabi is Todoroki Touya and trying to exchange him for a ransom so they can eat something else than instant noodles.
Endeavor receiving that phone call like “we have your son. send ten, no, fifty, no, 85 thousand yen to—”
“Shouto’s been trained for this, you don’t have him, he has you.”
“…no, your other son”
cue pause until Endeavor remembers his other son
“Natsuo? You have Natsuo?”
furious muttering and not-muttering occurs away from the phone. Endeavor is only half-listening, more concerned with figuring out who gave away his personal phone number than Natsuo’s well-being. Elsewhere, in college, Natsuo feels incandescent rage and desire to stuff itching powder in Endeavor’s left socks.
“he says he isn’t Natsuo”
“then whoever you have isn’t my son”
Endeavor hangs up the phone. Touya is pissed that he’s been downgraded to not-even-a-son status. It is unknown whether he’s aware that his family believes he died years ago
Endeavor, several months later, upon Touya doing his Dramatic Reveal™: oh you had my OTHER other son
Endeavor: why didn’t you SAY
Touya, Shigaraki, Shouto, everyone on the battlefield:
THE REAL REASONS YOU SHOULD SEE PACIFIC RIM
1. It is an original story by an original director that cares more about characters and humanity than sex scenes and explosions.
2. It is one of the few summer blockbusters that is practical effects heavy. Not everything is CGI.
3. None of the main characters are big dumb American cowboys.
4. People of color as (well developed and compelling) main characters.
5. A female lead that is not a love interest, sex symbol, or tool of the male lead’s development.
6. Beautifully choreographed fight scenes. Unlike Transformers, in which neither the camera or action stays still long enough for you to see what is happening, Pacific Rim’s fights are shot much more like Kung Fu films.
7. Attention to detail. This world is fucking huge. And deep. 20+ years of continuity are introduced in the first ten minutes, leaving tons to the imagination.
8. Real emotional consequences. This ain’t a story about a boy and his car. This is a story about what it feels like to share the feelings, fears, and hopes of other human beings.
9. This is the movie your inner 10 year old has been craving your entire life, and maybe only got satisfied by a couple of films along the way. Imagine Independence Day but without the air of American exceptionalism and gross patriotism.
10. Total and complete lack of cynicism. This is a movie about hope, humanism, optimism, and the shared bond of humanity. It believes that we are stronger when we work together than when we are selfish. That’s a message for a summer blockbuster.
ALSO MUSIC THAT WILL MAKE YOU WANT TO JOIN SOULS WITH A GIANT TOWER OF MACHINERY AND DESTRUCTION AND FIGHT GIANT SEA MONSTERS
duh duh duh DUH DUH DUUUUUUUH
yyyyyyeah okay i'll watch that!
i was tidepooling today and overheard someone say 'chatgpt it so we can figure out what it is' about some sort of creature. loser behavior. you're not in it for the love of the game. i have to do everything around here. let me see the creature. i'll tell you the real answer about what it is and i won't kill the environment. AND i'm literally nice.
it's funny because 5 minutes before that i was IDing something by using the search string "SEA SLUG GREEN STRIPED SMALL SEATTLE" which took me to a very badly designed, hauntingly non mobile optimized website that immediately gave me way more information about my creature than i needed or thought was possible. get good. bitch
hold my hand. come with me to emeralddiving.com's salish sea species index.
Doctor who villains:
The free WiFi that kills you
Monster that eats feelings
The actual devil
Dinosaurs
Suddenly a forest
Weight loss drug that’s actually an egg
The moon
Big traffic jam
The earbuds that turn you into a robot
Giant spiders
I actually remember all of these. If not, I would have assumed this was a shitpost
These are just from new who as well. I didn’t even get into classic who and such iconic villains as bioengineered rats from space and the vampires that can be repelled if you believe in communism hard enough
Yeah the Christmas trees that kill you we’ve all seen them
Me in 2021:
Me in 2025:
Memories
So a couple days ago, some folks braved my long-dormant social media accounts to make sure I’d seen this tweet:
And after getting over my initial (rather emotional) response, I wanted to reply properly, and explain just why that hit me so hard.
So back around twenty years ago, the internet cosplay and costuming scene was very different from today. The older generation of sci-fi convention costumers was made up of experienced, dedicated individuals who had been honing their craft for years. These were people who took masquerade competitions seriously, and earning your journeyman or master costuming badge was an important thing. They had a lot of knowledge, but – here’s the important bit – a lot of them didn’t share it. It’s not just that they weren’t internet-savvy enough to share it, or didn’t have the time to write up tutorials – no, literally if you asked how they did something or what material they used, they would refuse to tell you. Some of them came from professional backgrounds where this knowledge literally was a trade secret, others just wanted to decrease the chances of their rivals in competitions, but for whatever reason it was like getting a door slammed in your face. Now, that’s a generalization – there were definitely some lovely and kind and helpful old-school costumers – but they tended to advise more one-on-one, and the idea of just putting detailed knowledge out there for random strangers to use wasn’t much of a thing. And then what information did get out there was coming from people with the freedom and budget to do things like invest in all the tools and materials to create authentic leather hauberks, or build a vac-form setup to make stormtrooper armor, etc. NOT beginner friendly, is what I’m saying.
Then, around 2000 or so, two particular things happened: anime and manga began to be widely accessible in resulting in a boom in anime conventions and cosplay culture, and a new wave of costume-filled franchises (notably the Star Wars prequels and the Lord of the Rings movies) hit the theatres. What those brought into the convention and costuming arena was a new wave of enthusiastic fans who wanted to make costumes, and though a lot of the anime fans were much younger, some of them, and a lot of the movie franchise fans, were in their 20s and 30s, young enough to use the internet to its (then) full potential, old enough to have autonomy and a little money, and above all, overwhelmingly female. I think that latter is particularly important because that meant they had a lifetime of dealing with gatekeepers under our belts, and we weren’t inclined to deal with yet another one. They looked at the old dragons carefully hoarding their knowledge, keeping out anyone who might be unworthy, or (even worse) competition, and they said NO. If secrets were going to be kept, they were going to figure things out for ourselves, and then they were going to share it with everyone. Those old-school costumers may have done us a favor in the long run, because not knowing those old secrets meant that we had to find new methods, and we were trying – and succeeding with – materials that “serious” costumers would never have considered. I was one of those costumers, but there were many more – I was more on the movie side of things, so JediElfQueen and PadawansGuide immediately spring to mind, but there were so many others, on YahooGroups and Livejournal and our own hand-coded webpages, analyzing and testing and experimenting and swapping ideas and sharing, sharing, sharing.
I’m not saying that to make it sound like we were the noble knights of cosplay, riding in heroically with tutorials for all. I’m saying that a group of people, individually and as a collective, made the conscious decision that sharing was a Good Things that would improve the community as a whole. That wasn’t necessarily an easy decision to make, either. I know I thought long and hard before I posted that tutorial; the reaction I had gotten when I wore that armor to a con told me that I had hit on something new, something that gave me an edge, and if I didn’t share that info I could probably hang on to that edge for a year, or two, or three. And I thought about it, and I was briefly tempted, but again, there were all of these others around me sharing what they knew, and I had seen for myself what I could do when I borrowed and adapted some of their ideas, and I felt the power of what could happen when a group of people came together and gave their creativity to the world.
And it changed the face of costuming. People who had been intimidated by the sci-fi competition circuit suddenly found the confidence to try it themselves, and brought in their own ideas and discoveries. And then the next wave of younger costumers took those ideas and ran, and built on them, and branched out off of them, and the wave after that had their own innovations, and suddenly here we are, with Youtube videos and Tumblr tutorials and Etsy patterns and step-by-step how-to books, and I am just so, so proud.
So yeah, seeing appreciation for a 17-year-old technique I figured out on my dining-room table (and bless it, doesn’t that page just scream “I learned how to code on Geocities!”), and having it embraced as a springboard for newer and better things warms this fandom-old’s heart. This is our legacy, and a legacy the current group of cosplayers is still creating, and it’s a good one.
(Oh, and for anyone wondering: yes, I’m over 40 now, and yes, I’m still making costumes. And that armor is still in great shape after 17 years in a hot attic!)
Hang on a minute. I recognize the name “penwiper”. Let me check– Ok, yeah, I’ve heard of this person.
OP also invented armsocks.
Y'all might have noticed that your friendly community moderator has been slacking a bit lately. No updates. No organizing. What the heck was
OP I have been thinking about YOUR IMPACT since 2011. Do you know what you did for Homestuck lmao
Another example of a foundational internet text that millions of people don’t know was so influential.
saving this for the arm socks technique, my lord. bless them.
Art by Lestoidea 蟌
The cool thing about death note is you could feasibly explain the basic premise of it like the mechanics of the note and also L and lights weird homoerotic shit and you would have a pretty good idea of what the entire plot is like without ever having to explain the terrifying floating clown monster
Yeah the terrifying death god who looks like a clown, likes apples, and follows you at all times
He is just hanging out
#I always assumed that was L but I am delighted to find out that he's just a guy and he's chilling
The terrifying floating clown monster is, in fact, not L.
#i knew he was there but i don’t know why
Don't worry the audience extrapolated it back out. You zip the file and communicate it, they unzip it.
This is the best explanation of the reader's contribution to art I've ever heard.
> I am recommended a feminist historical romance
> I ask whether it’s actually feminist, or whether it’s a story about how patriarchy is good as long as the patriarch is benevolent
> they don’t understand
> I describe the common trope in faux-feminist historical romance where the female lead is able to “escape” the sexism of her time simply by marrying the rare good man who respects women— as if patriarchy is a problem of abusive individuals, rather than an inherently abusive system. As if all the issues in patriarchy go away if the man you marry is Nice. As if “patriarchal systems can actually work well when the patriarch is kind and loves you uwu” is a bold feminist statement, instead of the cornerstone of inherently reactionary tradwife beliefs about gender roles.
> they laugh
> “it’s a feminist historical romance”
> look inside
> it’s a story about how patriarchy is good as long as the patriarch is benevolent
[oc] Rainy flower