a couple various blue and clifford doodles
Keni
Not today Justin
taylor price
🪼

tannertan36

JVL
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Stranger Things
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Misplaced Lens Cap

roma★

@theartofmadeline
Cosimo Galluzzi

Kiana Khansmith
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Mike Driver
No title available
untitled
d e v o n

seen from Poland
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Australia
seen from Brazil

seen from South Korea
seen from Vietnam

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from Argentina

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
@descriptivist
a couple various blue and clifford doodles
I miss the little fairy telling me to piss my panties. :(
me too
she is drinking one fifth her total body volume in hard liquor
Throw her
as much as i love seeing expressive static miku where shes like a whole cartoon character (hey… maybe because.. she is one!)
i am a STRONG believer of a miku that almost never breaks her whole mask of “=)”
The only times she’d ever break are if she’s talking to a kid:
Or if shes by herself (i tried making a serious drawing for this one but i physically couldnt im sorry this is all i got 😞):
you dont need the butter pillow you dont need the butter pillow you dont need the butter pillow
all i'm getting from the tags and replies on this post is the butter pillow has cast a devious spell on most of you. you have fallen for the trap of the butter pillow.
how easily the human will crumples in the face of the butter pillow
saw an elderly woman walking around with a tote bag whose design were the four AO3 fic category squares and she very excitedly asked if i was a reader or a writer bcs nobody else at the con had recognized it, and after telling her that i've been writing fic since fanfic.net, she solemnly nodded and explained that she'd been reading fic since "the days of personal websites" but that she only started writing fanfic when she was 47 and oh my god when i tell you that i genuinely teared up on the spot!!!!! like!!! HELL YEAH???? LITERALLY NEVER TOO OLD TO START WRITING. NEVER TOO OLD TO WRITE AND SHARE YOUR FIC.
her enthusiastic "i'm a very nice and bubbly person, i swear! but i love writing angst and major character death :)" nearly took me the fuck out.
icon. legend. diva. i wish her nothing but a kajillion million comments and kudos. i hope her fic updates crash AO3. i hope she knows i'm promoting her to my personal patron saint of AO3.
new vid out! all about game design and subtle narrative in the Kanto region in Pokémon, by talking about the poison type!!
This is the most amazing, insightful analysis I've ever seen, stemming from an honest effort to answer the simple question: "What did the designers want this to do?"
W/R/T Patricia Taxxon, and any other trans woman who’s been turned into lolcow:
Obsessively documenting a trans woman you don’t like is kiwifarmer behavior.
I think it’s interesting that punk trainers in Kalos back in X&Y had blue/green hair if they were dudes and pink hair if they were women.
And that Lebanne has green hair.
I’m not saying she’s an egg who got forcefemmed by Jacinthe until she cracked, but I’m not NOT saying that either.
I have the first volume of this My Little Pony manga and found volume 2 at my local library so I've been reading it and of course, I still love TwiPie and their dorky antics.
From My Little Pony The Manga: A Day in the Life of Equestria Volume 2
Been waiting to know what timeline Coffee Buns takes place in!? Been itching for a polycule route in Mice Tea?! All your desires (presumably) will be satisfied by this official comic made in collaboration with @irldonut.bsky.social !
*goombella voice* That's God... he's the nasty little fucker that created this realm. Max HP is 50, Attack is 5, and Defence is 1. Watch out for that "Divine Wrath Hammer" attack! It says here that he draws power from his worshippers. Jeez! You'd think this guy would have better things to do than come here and attack us...
Meet Our Contributors: E. J. Barnes and LB Lee
E. J. Barnes and LB Lee collaborated to make Bring Me the Head of Phineas Gage!, a story about a man who survived a devastating brain injury. (See our Kickstarter here.) Read on for a few words with the creators behind the Phineas Gage comic.
Jordan Stillman: Why did you choose this topic?
E. J. Barnes: I chose this topic because I’d been thinking of doing a story about Gage—possibly a mini-comic—for some time. Several years ago on my birthday I asked my boyfriend to take me to the Countway Library at Harvard Medical School, specifically to see Gage’s skull, hole and all. Gage has been on my mind for some time.
LB Lee: In my case, E. J. came up with the idea and approached me later. I knew a bit about Phineas Gage, and it was an interesting case, plus [it] meshed nicely with my earlier work in mental health comics. I really respect E. J.’s professionalism and her work, so I was excited to work with her.
JS: Why is it important?
EB: The case of Gage is widely considered an anomaly—the news reports at the time weren’t especially florid, more like one-paragraph “odds & ends” like in News of the Weird. But the way Gage’s case, and the alleged changes in his behavior, have historically been used in basic medical and neurology textbooks is instructive about the things “everybody knows” that ain’t so—including the things that authorities pass on to newbies without closely examining what little evidence there is.
LL: I didn’t realize the extent to which the Phineas Gage narrative has been embellished and elaborated on over the years, without really the facts to back it up. And of course, I have personal reasons for being interested in other folks who have had to adapt to severe trauma.
JS: Why and how is it interesting?
EB: One of the most interesting parts of the story, to me, is how Gage’s case became a political football in the debate between phrenologists and anti-phrenologists. The phrenologists were wrong-headed about a number of things, including being able to judge a person’s natural personality by measuring bumps on their skull. But their more absurd theories only made it harder for standard medical scientists to accept localization of at least some brain functions.
LL: Who doesn’t want to know about people who survive gruesome injuries? Even now, surviving an impalement through the head is impressive, and this was before the advent of antibiotics. That Phineas Gage lived as long as he did, and carried on despite a medical system and a society with no clue how to deal with him, is fascinating to read about. So little is known about the man except for his injury; there’s so much to imagine!
JS: How did you put the comic together? How did you draw it? What is your technique?
EB: I approached LB to do the story because they are interested in the science and history of neurology. I started my research by reading An Odd Kind of Fame and other materials listed in the bibliography of the Wikipedia article on Phineas Gage. I also went online looking for contemporary photographs of some of the major figures in the story as well as reference illustrations of scenery, 19th-century technology and fashion, and other pictures that LB would find useful.
LL: I did the initial layouts in pencil in a spiral, and then I drew the pages entirely digitally, which I’ve only done once before. I recently got a gift of MangaStudio from an anonymous benefactor, which helped make digital comics suddenly much easier for me.
JS: Why is science awesome? How do you feel about science?
EB: I majored in Chemistry, and while I worked instead as a software engineer after receiving my Bachelor’s degree, I still enjoy science—and history of science—very much. These things help us understand not only how our world works, but how our thoughts about them have evolved over time. One of the comics I’ve written, illustrated, and self-published on my own is Caroline’s Catalog, the true story of a female astronomer who discovered eight comets, corrected the standard star catalog of her era, had her new catalog published by the Royal Society of London (the leading society of scientists in the 18th century), and received awards and medals in her lifetime for her work. http://www.drownedtownpress.com/caroline.html
LL: I really love science; I feel it brings wonder to the world even as it explains it. I also find the psychology AROUND science interesting… How people will distort or misrepresent it to further their own goals, as has happened with Gage. He’s been used to “scientifically prove” all sorts of nonsense, including phrenology! I find that kind of human error interesting.
JS: Why should people support Boundless?
EB: Boundless is a book that not only aims to demonstrate that science is entertaining, but that comics—the combination of words and pictures—is specially positioned to convey complex ideas in ways that are easy to follow.
LL: Because science is awesome, comics are awesome, so both of them together are MAJOR awesome! :D