I'm umbrellatastic on AO3, but don't bother looking for me anywhere but the comments. I'm more interested in doing bookbinding, and will leave the writing to other folks (please and thank you)
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🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
ojovivo

shark vs the universe
untitled
Cosimo Galluzzi
RMH
Cosmic Funnies

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Kaledo Art
official daine visual archive
wallacepolsom
Sade Olutola
EXPECTATIONS
Misplaced Lens Cap
Mike Driver
Today's Document
tumblr dot com
hello vonnie
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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@gildingthelelepress
I'm umbrellatastic on AO3, but don't bother looking for me anywhere but the comments. I'm more interested in doing bookbinding, and will leave the writing to other folks (please and thank you)
Day 36- Necluda Depths
(The Skulltalos is a fan made boss monster designed by yours truly, because the lack of variety in the Depths saddens me.)
The depths are chock full of botanical wonders and amazing beasts! Sometimes too amazing. The Yiga clan and our two heroes may absolutely loathe each other, but the giant spiders really put your priorities back in order.
(This totk rewrite au is called Familiar Familiar! It all starts when Zelda doesn’t get sent back in time.)
((Wanna support me? Check out my patreon, with my throw away sketches and references! Remember to use web or android folks, apple charges 30 percent tax.))
maarten inghels
@sherbertilluminated there's a line somewhere in Ursula Vernon's Digger that goes something like "it is difficult to be metaphysical around the truly geologically minded"
My favorite genre of self-portrait is cartoonists being bothered by their characters while trying to draw
Bill Watterson – Calvin and Hobbes (1986)
Hergé – Tintin (1947, Tintin Magazine)
Jeff Smith – Bone (1993, Bone Holiday Special)
Walt Kelly – Pogo (1950, Maclean's Magazine)
And a bonus:
Berkeley Breathed – Bloom County
for the reverse, take this image of Tove Jansson about to murder the moomin characters
Do yall ever think about what is your rarest achievement?
Like I was thinking about it today and if you thought of all possible human experiences as achievements you could receive in a video game, it would be clear that there are millions of possible achievements, with some distant reaches of the achievement trees so obscure that only one or two people have ever seen them.
For example, there is like, one guy who has gotten to the achievement See 10,000 species of bird.
I think eating every kind of fruit awards a unique achievement. I only reached Eat a pomegranate last year. And there are exploration-based achievements, like Visit New York City or [Hidden] Discover the abandoned barn with the huge Cathode Ray Tube TV and the deer skulls.
People's achievement trees would look really different. I haven't unlocked hardly anything on the Sports, Recreational Drugs, Physical Feats, or Travel achievement trees. I have a wide range of rare achievements on the Textile Arts achievement tree. I definitely have the most achievements on the Nature achievement tree.
Some of the achievements with the most EXP that I have are Witness a total solar eclipse and Forage and eat wild mushrooms (without getting poisoned). I think that [Hidden] Get shot at might also be up there
Recently I've unlocked Have a conversation in a second language with a native speaker and Warp a loom
But I still haven't unlocked Ride a skateboard or Do a cartwheel
My dad recently unlocked Become a cyborg (he got a surgery where he gets an implant that he controls with a remote). That has to have a pretty big EXP reward. But there are a lot of low-stakes achievements like Skip a rock across some water or Buy something from a vending machine
my grandpa was a good man. and it really wasnt his fault - recreationally lying to kids is a proud family tradition - but he told me, once, that cutting a worm in half resulted in two worms.
i think he said it so i'd be more morally okay with fishing? i actually dont remember the context.
point was, he told me this, and he understimated (by a very large margin) how much i liked worms. i was a worm boy. very wormy. and after hearing that, i went home, and i dug through the garden, flipped over every rock, did everything i could to gather as many worms as i could, and then i uh.
i cut them all in half. every worm i could find. all of them. with scissors.
i then took this pile of split worms, and i put them in a box with a bit of lettuce and some water and stuff and went to bed expecting to double my worms overnight. i have math autism, so i had a vague understanding that if i did this just a few times in a row, i would eventually have a completely unreasonable amount of worms.
i was very excited to become this plane's worm emperor.
(i think i was...six?)
anyway, i did not become the inheritor of the worm crown. i instead woke up to a box of dead worms and cried. a lot. i got diagnosed with panic attacks as a teenager, but i think i had them as a kid, i just had no idea what they were. i was kind of processing that a.) i had killed what i had assumed was every single worm in my yard, and thus would have no more worms, and b). i was going to like, worm hell.
(six year babylon spent a lot of time worrying about god.)
so i kind of freaked out, and i climbed a tree, because god can only smite you if you're touching the ground (?) and i sat up there mostly inconsolable until my mom came out and asked, hey, what's up? what happened?
so i explained to her that i had killed all of the worms, forever, and was also Damned, and she took me to the compost pile, and we dug for all of five seconds and found like twenty more worms.
the compost pile was full of worms.
she then told me that a). there were more worms, and we could put them back under rocks and stuff and recolonize our yard and b). that one day, i would die, and go to heaven, and be able to talk to the worms face to face. that i'd be able to tell them all that i was very sorry, and that i killed them on accident, driven only by excessive Love, and that she was positive they would forgive me because worms have six hearts and no malice.
at that point, i think i was sixty percent tear-snot by weight, and i had no choice but to gather enough worms that i could hug them. which my mom helped with. and then after that she helped me put some worms back under each rock.
and for my epilogue: i spent a significant portion of my childhood in trees. and for many years after, even when my mom didnt know i was watching, i would catch her giving the space under the rocks a light spritz with the hose. not because she loved worms.
but because she loved me.
I literally just made a new Tumblr account so I can tell people this and hopefully not dox myself (this is the dumbest idea ever). I got a paper published (in a small undergraduate journal, so it's not that impressive) about Dracula Daily and the queer interpretations of the main characters, not just the Count, that the lovely Dracula Daily fandom has created! I just wanted to thank y'all for being such a wonderful, creative, gay as hell, and kind fandom that has not only allowed me to grow as a person but as a scholar. This paper would not exist in any capacity without this community and your love of all of the characters If you want to read the paper for some reason I put the link at the bottom and if you have any questions I would love to answer them! Also please don't find me in real life, I'm so afraid. Thanks again for being the coolest people out there and making such fabulous posts and art that I simply had to write about them!
Link to paper:
i recently saw a tiktok where a woman asked "girlies: what are some things you do to be more whimsical? I love knowing cute little habbits"
and i've never loved a comment section more. some of my faves:
(˶˃ ᵕ ˂˶)
I talk to basically everything as if it's a person. I greet passing crows as my "cousins." I respond conversationally to my cats. I yell "same to you!" when inanimate objects make loud noises. I say good morning to plants. I thank my phone when an alarm goes off. When objects don't act the way I want them to I explain what I need them to do, or tell them they're being rude. I tell my car when we're stopping for gas.
I reassure credit card readers who are struggling that I know they are doing their best. Bless you, you funky lil machine, I'm sorry my dad is part of the reason people hate you. :(
If an object looks like it's about to roll away or fall over I'll put it in its place and then raise my index finger and one eyebrow at it like it's a naughty child or a cat about to push a glass of water over, like "Ah ah ah! Stay where you are!" I did this to my groceries last week and the checkout lady saw me and said "That was adorable."
The Elvenking and The Goblin King
I would reblog directly from you @lydiacroftart if you post this masterpiece also on tumblr.
spin the wheel and get assigned a jewish food (if you get something unfamiliar, I encourage you to look it up and discover something new!)
what do you think of this food
I love it
Meh/neutral
I don't like it
I've never had it but I would like it
I've never had it but I would NOT like it
*obligatory notice: don't do any "this thing isn't actually jewish it originates from [insert country] here" bc jewish people are allowed to adapt and enjoy foods from the cultures that surround them, thereby making said food, in fact, a jewish food.
a BRILLIANT read, and even more incentive for me to make my own wizards trope-defying and excellent.
God it’s fascinating to look at the timestamp on this one and then realize that Pratchett went on to write his Witches Series and Granny Weatherwax, who’s strong and fierce and brilliant and austere and so achingly, bitterly, intensely good. I think Granny Weatherwax would give Gandalf a hard look and Gandalf would remember he had a very urgent appointment three shires away and stroll off really fast.Â
Holy fuck, everybody go read this right now.Â
Pratchett is one of the people whose work is not only hilarious, but legitimately brilliant. I learned so much from reading his books. Even this talk is peppered with the kind of thing that makes you snort out loud and get stared at by coworkers:Â
No wonder witches were always portrayed as toothless — it was living in a 90,000 calorie house that did it. You’d hear a noise in the night and it’d be the local kids, eating the doorknob.
And he fucking nails the witch/wizard dichotomy. Wizards = wise, powerful, organized, educated; witches = crones who give you warts. The Tiffany Aching series addresses this directly, as do the regular Discworld books focusing on the Lancre witches. Like Roach says, Granny Weatherwax is achingly, bitterly, intensely good, and that’s partly because she’s constantly aware of how easy it would be to be bad. How someone has to do the mucky jobs and help the obnoxious and stupid and never, ever take credit for anything you didn’t do; how the hardest thing is to stay balanced just on the edge between extremes, maintain that equilibrium, do what needs to be done no matter how awful or difficult it may be. Wizards never have to think about this. They just forge straight ahead, eating big dinners and squabbling amongst themselves and taking their power for granted.
Come to think of it, that’s one of the most significant divisions of power in Discworld: the men all gang up into this big elitist mob and loll around indolently, specifically not doing magic. Their magic is so powerful and dangerous that it’s a better use of their time to all keep each other down, all the wizard books basically revolve around ‘Oh no, someone’s doing magic, we’d better stomp them flat and then go home for second breakfast’. They keep the world from turning inside out but not much more than that, and they’re kind of a bunch of assholes about it too. Meanwhile the witches are just grimly slogging along, delivering babies and rousting out vampires and changing compresses, like, they stake out territories and then take care of everyone in it… while everyone still thinks that wizards are respectable and witches are shady.Â
The line about equal rites killed me, though. The insightful commentary (on the internet no less) here helped buffer that.
Discworld Heritage Post
It’s the difference between status and value. Who does the necessary work, and who takes the credit. Who the world would actually fall apart without, and who reaps the rewards of being considered important.
There’s gender in it, but shades of poor-and-rich as well.
What’s marvellous I think here is that Pratchett’s criticism of Le Guin, on Earthsea, was made in 1985 - and in 1990, she wrote Tehanu, which is a fantastic indictment of the sexism and misogyny of the earlier Earthsea books. Doesn’t meant she saw this, she probably didn’t - her own unease with the earlier Earthsea books was evident in other places - but it’s what Pratchett himself is saying, reality creates fantasy creates reality.
Terry being brilliant, and read the comments.
I love seeing all the enthusiasm for the fics in my fanbind posts. I hope those authors get to see and hear plenty of that energy.
Even after looking at hits/comments stats I am never quite certain if authors feel seen and appreciated. Seems like it could be easy to get discouraged.
I don’t mean anything rude by that. It just hit me a little harder than usual that there are potentially sizable gaps between how much we readers esteem a thing and how much of that the authors know about
This year I had the pleasure of binding a couple of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine fics. This one is Lost in Translation (Patching the UT) by @antimonyantigone
The fic itself is formatted as personal logs by a linguist working on the universal translator, and that gave me an excuse to stare extra hard at Michael Okuda’s graphic interface designs for the show. I picked a couple and used them for indexes, endpapers, etc.
The weaving on the back is a honeycomb texture that I keep telling everybody is a great parallel to some of the twisty linguistic snarls that delighted me in the fic.
This bind also has a spine reinforced by my beloved puerh tea papers. I doubt the smell actually lingers, but it was a delicious secret I had to throw in.
I only bind great fics by authors who gave their blessing to the endeavor, so please take this as a heartfelt recommendation!
Fanbind of An Innocent Man (Guilty as Charged) by @jazzypizzaz
I adore the photos of this book at its destination, but I take a few for record-keeping before I send the book.
I used a coptic stitch because it is what I know best, with a few elements of spine reinforcement borrowed from the Renegade Guild’s beloved K118 binding technique. If I did my job right, nobody will ever actually see the cool puerh tea wrappers that help reinforce the spine.
I came up with all sorts of bookbinding gimmicks that were inspired by the story, but in the spirit of keeping the focus on a good read rather than razzle dazzle, I limited myself to the inset stereoscopic moon images on the cover, tiny stars at scene breaks and endpapers, and a color-shifting thread to stitch it all together. It would not do to be completely without flair for a story in Quark’s pov!
I am not good at recommendations, but come on. DS9 AU full of Quark’s scheming?!?! I was sold before I even got to the additional tags.