Me: *scrolls past this post*
Me: Oh my god it's a FORK lift.
Me: *begrudgingly scrolls back up to reblog*

Origami Around

oozey mess

titsay
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

JBB: An Artblog!
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Discoholic 🪩
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pixel skylines

tannertan36
Monterey Bay Aquarium
styofa doing anything
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Kaledo Art
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

shark vs the universe

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
RMH

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@opinioninvalid
Me: *scrolls past this post*
Me: Oh my god it's a FORK lift.
Me: *begrudgingly scrolls back up to reblog*
Spiderman being the most relatable superhero part one
Unrestrained summer fun
ok well we’re bringing that back obviously
me latibulating
I'm appalled. they crushed that fucking baby appalled im now realizing this is more gorey than I anticipated. tw
dishonored ► brigmore manor
Harvard researchers discover new ways for you to sound like a psychopath weirdo who nobody wants to talk to
tell me Will,
Having a totally normal one at work today
Looks like the jury's in on this one
Do you work in a Rock Library or something?
Do people come to your place of work and check out assorted rocks to enjoy at home? A Public Rock Archive??
The thing that gets me about a lot of pseudoscientific medicine is the baffling way in which they view the human body.
It isn’t the inaccuracy that gets to me; we have a long history of just fucking guessing how the body works. It’s not even the extreme simplicity of their models. It’s how vulnerable they seem to think it is.
I mean, the skin is a barrier. It keeps stuff in and it keeps stuff out. Yes, there is some limited permeability; if you smear the right kinds of things on your skin then a little bit will get into your body (this is how topical anaesthetics work, and why we wear gloves in chemical labs). But some people are like “smooth this acai berry cream on your skin to boost your immune system!” [note: you DO NOT WANT to boost your immune system], or “put a raw potato under your armpit to draw to toxins out of your body!” or some shit. I look at those foot bath things that fill up with yellow rust as you use them and people go, “all that yellow stuff is the toxins being drawn out through your feet!” and I am horrified at their mental model for how the body works. They know your insides are protected by skin, right? Right?? If I thought my body was that permeable I’d wear a hazmat suit at all times. What if I touch some mud that’s got Toxins in it and they all get absorbed into my body? What if I use the wrong root vegetable under my armpit and it sucks all the vitamins out of my blood instead? That’s terrifying!
“Drink alkaline water every morning to keep your blood pH high!” Friend, how vulnerable is your blood to pH changes? You know that a fairly small variation can kill you?? If I thought this worked I’d never eat fermented foods again. I’d never clean with vinegar in case my Super Permeable Frog Skin absorbed all the acid into my blood and I died of acidemia.
“This essential oil gives you energy! This one boosts your immune system!” They’re for smells! They make smells! In your view, how much of my metabolism and immune regulation are dependent on what my environment smells like?? Am I going to die because I bought the Strawberry Surprise scented candle instead of sandalwood and my body forgot how to make ATP?? What???
The extreme fragility that they perceive in the human body, with apparently no barriers or regulatory mechanisms, vulnerable to such tiny changes in diet and environment, would terrify me. If I thought of the body like this I would never leave the house.
Heyyyyy, it’s that thing that I wrote a 350-page dissertation about from a slightly different perspective (fears of radioactive contamination)! I argued that this obsessive anxiety about the permeability of the body has to do with an increased awareness of the fact that in a conceptual sense the body actually DOESN’T have a firm barrier between what is “it” and “not-it”— a normal, healthy body is always permeable and infiltrated, and our new ability to visualize this leads to a lot of uncertainty about how to sustain our basic model of the discrete, independent, rational person. (If we’re always “contaminated” by other substances and creatures, then how do we know what the authentic “us” is?) So that gets expressed through increasingly drastic efforts to “purify” the body, and intense fears about what will happen if this can’t be done.
So in other words: OP, I agree.
This post has passed peer review.
Describing Water Tribe clothes, furniture, etc, and feel like you just keep saying "fur" and "skin" over and over and over again? Wanna be more descriptive but you just don't know what kind of skins look and feel what kind of ways? Fear Not! I, an Actual Real Life Eskimo™ (King Island Inupiaq for those who don't know), have cultural knowledge that may help!
As ever, this is a collection of helpful tips to use as you please. I'm not in the business of telling anyone what to write or not write. I'd just like to share what I know and hope this helps anyone who might be annoyed by a lack of knowledge that can take some creative googling and persistant note-taking to figure out. Plus given the atlaverse's fun fantasy animals, you can switch it up and mix the following animals with each other or with completely different ones. Go bananas.
Please also note this is not a comprehensive list. That would make up an entire thesis and require scouring old, racist records from outsiders and talking to every living elder in the north.
As a general rule, furs tend to be thicker and warmer in the winter because thats how animals evolved to survive the intense cold weather. The younger the animal, the softer the fur tends to be, but this is not always desired and it's preferred in most cases to avoid killing animals too young to survive on their own and their mothers.
Beaver:
Coarse and glossy guard hairs
Thick, stiff skin
Waterproof
Not much range in color, mostly russet brown
Caribou:
Hollow hairs that insulate very well
Used to make clothes warm enough to "sleep outside in fifty below [-50°F]"
Traditional Inupiaq mattress was just two layers of caribou skin
Skin and fur colored in a pattern, could cut light and dark skin from the same caribou
Ermine:
Fine, soft, short fur
Good for lining and trim
Dark in the summer and white with a black tip at the end of the tail in the winter
Fox:
Silky guard hairs with fluffy undercoat
Makes a good ruff for a parka hood
Skin traditionally used for women's shorts
Fairly manageable skin, not too stiff or prone to tearing.
Many types of foxes available so lots of color variation, from white to almost black, to a coppery color typical of red foxes
Rabbit:
Soft, velvety fur
Very supple skin
Color depends on season when harvested
Comfortable, but can easily wear
Good for lining
Used for menstrual rags
Seal:
Bristly guard hairs, no soft undercoat
Keeps out wind and rain but not very warm
Yellowed silver with small dark spots
Has a musky smell many find pleasant
Wolf:
Thick, bushy fur
Very warm
Skin can be thin and prone to tearing
Strong smell
Yellowish tan to gray to white
Wolverine:
Long, well-oiled fur
Fluffy undercoat
Resists water and frost
Good for ruffs, cuffs, and hems
Dark brown with lighter patterning
Other materials
Antler: more plentiful than wood in parts of the arctic, used for handles, beads, buttons for pouches, etc
Baleen: historically referred to as "whalebone," used to make small sleds, boot soles, and baskets. Engravings in pieces of baleen show up white against the black background. This art is called scrimshaw and when on long pieces of baleen, my depict a sequence
Fish skin: not a fur, obviously, but lightweight, flexible, and waterproof. Sometimes processed into thread, which may have otherwise been sinew
Grass: may be woven into baskets or insoles for boots
Gut: cleaned out intestines sewn together with tiny stitches, see through, made into waterproof over layer parkas
Ivory: tusks harvested from walruses, carved into beads, pipes, jewelry, and more. Cribbage boards have been fairly popular uses of ivory since contact. Ivory is popularly used for scrimshaw as well as baleen, and lines engraved in ivory are inked black for visual contrast.
Qiviut: musk-ox fiber, very fine, can be processed and spun like wool but is seven times denser. Many articles knit and crocheted of qiviut are made with a lacey pattern to prevent the wearer from overheating. To my knowledge, it was only used this way in Alaska as opposed to using the skins of hunted musk-oxen after the animals were reintroduced long after going extinct.
the heat has gotten to me
This transition is straight out of a horror movie
@heymynameismolly-jk wow
That actually gave me chills.
one of the things i really love about the first dishonored is the deeply melancholic atmosphere. the setting is a city that’s in free fall and it would have been easy to make it all seem chaotic and panicked. but instead the game goes for a more understated sadness that comes through in so much of dunwall. abandoned homes, destroyed homes, destroyed people. and the river and the sea omnipresent. daud and callista are the only characters to explicitly desire escaping via the sea but it’s my headcanon that pretty much every character has looked at the river and the sea and was seized with the urge to leave it all behind
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We just printed the coolest damn creature.. im so i love with him..
Model by @mcgybeer on insta.
I've been in a photography mood lately