styofa doing anything
noise dept.
YOU ARE THE REASON
d e v o n
Sade Olutola

izzy's playlists!

ellievsbear
occasionally subtle
wallacepolsom
Not today Justin
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Three Goblin Art

#extradirty
tumblr dot com
art blog(derogatory)

if i look back, i am lost
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Cosimo Galluzzi

Kaledo Art
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

seen from United States

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@nidusprime
Advertisement for the 1966 Pontiac Grand Prix (1966).
quick oc model i made to show a friend my modeling process for studying purposes (it took 3 hours 43 minutes to make the entire thing from start to finish, including unity setup time)
Kour Pour (British-Iranian, b. 1987, Exeter, England, based Los Angeles, CA, USA) - Tiger with Red Stripes Inside 2 Green Rectangles, 2022, Block Printing Ink, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas
From the series ‘Construction Workers’ by Victor Arimondi
Caligulas Ring
A 2,000-year-old sapphire ring, often attributed to Roman Emperor Caligula, features a delicate portrait engraved into the stone, widely believed to be his fourth and final wife, Caesonia. Crafting a ring from a single piece of sapphire was an immense technical feat in antiquity.
The Ring:
The Material: It is a hololith, meaning the entire ring (both the stone and the band) was carved out of a single piece of sky-blue sapphire.
The Engraving: The bezel features the profile of a woman, which historians and gem collectors associate with Caligula's empress, Milonia Caesonia.
Current Status: The ring is part of the legendary Marlborough Gems collection. It previously surfaced at an auction through the royal jewelers Wartski.
Provenience & Skepticism: While popular tradition links the ring to Caligula's extravagant reign (37–41 AD), many historians note that it is extremely difficult to verify ancient provenance. The earliest documented history of the ring traces back only to the 17th-century collection of Thomas Howard, the Earl of Arundel. Some art historians debate its ancient origins, suggesting it may have been crafted during the Renaissance.
Reverse AU thing
I said to myself I wouldn't draw reverse monster AU stuff just so I wouldn't distract myself but....then I wanted to draw a wereUHHHkangaroo Idk
Just having fun
Poor Spy somehow ends up in the Outback?
Reggae records scene, Alex Bartsch
Reminder to tie down your werewolves next full moon
Hardy tapioca
It was a long way
From the bathtub
War is hell and valorization of military imagery is fundamentally a childish and reactionary thing, but transitional periods of military history are a rich field of study, and I can't pretend this image of horse mounted trench lancers doesn't go hard as fuck.
PLA cavalry in a post-nuke war drill. Yes thats a saber / AK on horseback. Image went so hard I did a little study of it a while back
Footage from
hi everyone im alive........ um look at emer's banshee... smiles kindly
Age Christmas Tree Ornaments - Gablonzer Art Nouveau Ornament To 1920 (#13751) ebay AntiquesGermany
Hexagon Quilt
This is the second time I've seen a video of this technique and this explanation is so clear! It does use more fabric than English paper piecing (EPP) but you end up with a double sided hexagon so don't have to source fabric for the backing.
I'm doing EPP at the moment but I have a hole punch to make the papers and just use leaflets and junk mail, so it doesn't feel wasteful. I don't think it's difficult either- in the video she mentions it's not for beginners, but I don't have that much experience with hand sewing or EPP and I've been finding it pretty easy so YMMV
I saw this video yesterday and was seized with the need to try it out immediately. Lookit my cute lil' hexagon baby!!
Here is what the backside looks like. OP notes this takes more fabric than paper piecing, but that excess fabric makes it already triple-layered. Besides not needing backing fabric, I don't think you'd need batting for this quilt at all. It's already thick and soft just from folding all that fabric into a hexagon.
Hexagon quilt tutorial video by tiktok user camelscrafts. Method:
Each hexagon begins as a 6" circle. camelscrafts does this by creating a paper template using a compass. According to the video, a 6" circle will create a hexagon that is 2.5 inches tall.
These hexagons are hand-sewn. Thread the needle.
With the fabric right side facing, find the center of the circle by folding it in half right sides together, then folding it in half again (wrong sides are facing). The top of the triangle shape is the center of the fabric circle.
Make a small stitch into the center of the fabric. The wrong side is still facing.
Unfold the circle. There will be a small stitch in the center.
Now the hexagon is created by folding the circle into itself: Take the needle to one of the edges of the fabric (it doesn't matter which one). Pull the needle through and pull the thread tight. This will fold down the fabric and create an edge of the hexagon. Crease the fold with your finger.
This fold has two corners, one at the top and one at the bottom. Put the needle into one of the corners and pull the thread taut. This will create another fold.
Continue this going around the circle until all of it is folded down, creating the hexagon. camelscrafts notes that the last corner pulled in may be a little bit "wonky" (no precise point in the corner) if the corners were not done precisely. However, that corner is pulled into the back, so is not visible from the front.
The hexagon is now formed. Sew around the folds in the middle of the circle to hold the folds in place. Tie off and cut the thread.
Attach hexagons to each other along the sides. With right sides together, whip stitch the sides together.
vintage nursing photobooks, 1981
Grrrrrrrr