I LOVE HOW YOU DRAW JOHN AGAHAGAGAHHH🩷✨🩷✨🩷✨🩷✨✨✨
AGAHAGGAHAGAHAHGA AA THANK YOUU!! I’m so happy you like him 💞💞💕💞💞💕🌺💞💕🌺💞
noise dept.

★
Keni

Discoholic 🪩

PR's Tumblrdome
Show & Tell

Andulka

#extradirty

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Misplaced Lens Cap
Game of Thrones Daily
Three Goblin Art
No title available
ojovivo
Stranger Things

izzy's playlists!
Not today Justin
Mike Driver
Peter Solarz
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Maldives

seen from Germany

seen from Mexico

seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@juihwhite
I LOVE HOW YOU DRAW JOHN AGAHAGAGAHHH🩷✨🩷✨🩷✨🩷✨✨✨
AGAHAGGAHAGAHAHGA AA THANK YOUU!! I’m so happy you like him 💞💞💕💞💞💕🌺💞💕🌺💞
Hello hello! I offer you today: A Jonk. Designed by yours truly.
I hope you’ll love him as much as I do!
Sherlock in the rock pools :)))
Watson: gets married (allegedly), moves out of 221B (allegedly), buys a practice, has work to do
Holmes, dropping in unannounced: hey do u want to go to another city to investigate some random shit. Nah i don't really need help just thought you'd want to hang out. We're leaving right now btw
Watson, already at the door:
Not to mention the fact that in „The Reichenbach Fall“ the night before they ran away to europe together (wife who?) Holmes mentioned that ‚they set fire to OUR rooms at Baker Street‘. At this time Watson was living with his wife (allegedly).
I don’t think there’s anything more to say.
Holmes before and after being told he’s a good boy. I’m not crying, you are. 🥲
just another goddamn mystery
A wonderful monday everyone! I give you today, a new chapter to my Sherlock Holmes obsession: The Sherlock & Co. Podcast. Hope you will enjoy the future drawings i make of this wonderful adaptation.
Lanky tall man on the pavement.
idk what to say. It is just a Shlock.
John: Hey, Sherlock, are you ticklish?
Sherlock, taking 20 steps back: No
OMG THIS REMINDED ME OF A SKETCH I DID 2 DAYS AGO!!!!
Here: Have a tickle fight.
We need more Sherlock and co. fanart in this world
Just you wait…just you wait for Monday. :)
Your 221B Husbands on a leisurely afternoon reading each other some POEtry.
A beautiful Monday everyone! Today I give you another sketch of our two favourite roommates. This time i’ve planned to digitalise the sketch and make a painting of it. We will see when I finish it.
Can you really consider yourself a roommate if you don’t teach your fellow lodger the art of deduction??
I present to you: Sherlock Holmes in Drag. Inspired by a clip I once saw in a Johnlock compilation and it caught me very off guard (in a positive way). He was absolutely BEAUTIFUL! Also this was drawn during pride month so I guess that’s an additional slay.
If she were a drag queen…what do you think her stage name would be?
Some screenshots of the clip. I sadly don’t remember where I got them from. It’s horrible quality but I hope you can catch a glimpse of why I spiralled.
I present to you: Sherlock Holmes in Drag. Inspired by a clip I once saw in a Johnlock compilation and it caught me very off guard (in a positive way). He was absolutely BEAUTIFUL! Also this was drawn during pride month so I guess that’s an additional slay.
If she were a drag queen…what do you think her stage name would be?
CHARLES AUGUSTUS MILVERTON part 4 - death of a blackmailer
(part 1) (part 2) (part 3)
content warnings for: guns, blood, death. which you are *probably* expecting if you know how this story goes in canon, although this version is...not exactly how Watson told it to the Strand.
(This is part of the Watsons sketchbook series)
okay here are some thoughts I had while making this:
MILVERTON IS SUCH A WEIRD STORY. I believe it's the only case in canon where we don't meet the supposed client, Lady Eva, or even read a letter from them. That was what originally made me think there was more going on - that, and Holmes's "intensity of feeling" when he speaks about Milverton.
The 1885 Labouchere amendment, which made it much easier to prosecute men for having queer sex, was called "the Blackmailer's Law". Although queer sex was illegal before the passage of the law, two people needed to actually be caught in the act. After 1885, the standard for evidence got much looser - including suggestive letters.
Learning about that in conjunction with reading Milverton put this idea in my head - that Holmes is Milverton's target. I've been avoiding reading fic or watching any other adaptations of this story because I knew I had a specific way I wanted to do it, but I know I'm far from the first one to draw this connection!
The second WEIRD part of this story is the remarkable coincidence that, on the same night Watson and Holmes burgle Milverton's house and hide behind the curtains, a mysterious woman appears and shoots him. "No interference upon our part could have saved the man from his fate". With uncharacteristic passivity, they watch a man die and a murderer escape. Holmes has certainly let criminals go before, but usually he talks to them first!
As I was digging into the story, certain descriptors for this mysterious avenger stood out to me. She is described as tall, dark, and lithe. She has "a face with a curved nose, strong, dark eyebrows shading hard, glittering eyes, and a straight, thin-lipped mouth set in a dangerous smile". Does that sound like anyone else we know?
I truly believe that the enduring power of the Sherlock Holmes canon lies in the fact that Doyle did not write these stories with particular care. There are holes, inconsistencies, contradictions, and gaps. At the same time, the charismatic center of the story is (while chastising Watson for not recording his adventures accurately) telling the reader to pay attention to trifles. To look closer, to ask questions, to consider every angle, no matter how outlandish. The combination of these two factors results in: a series of facts that do not *quite* hang together, and authorial permission to attempt to deduce the true story.
Finally, something that fascinates me about the Victorian era is that it marked the birth of many ideologies and power systems that, in the 2020s, we are now living through the consequences of. Notably, capitalism. Milverton, who insists he is only doing business, and therefore is innocent, while ruining lives, struck me as a very modern villain. "How could one compare the ruffian, who in hot blood bludgeons his mate, with this man, who methodically and at his leisure tortures the soul and wrings the nerves in order to add to his already swollen money-bags?"
If only we could hit more men like that with chairs.
“It was worth a wound–it was worth many wounds–”
- Sherlock Holmes, the Adventure of the Three Garridebs
Full text and individual pages under cut:
Look at him. I would die for him. I would kill for him.
Either way — what bliss.