
祝日 / Permanent Vacation

if i look back, i am lost

Kaledo Art
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hello vonnie
Three Goblin Art

Origami Around
Claire Keane
KIROKAZE
AnasAbdin
One Nice Bug Per Day
dirt enthusiast
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Love Begins
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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todays bird
noise dept.
Stranger Things

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@seaskyblue
If the lord ever got attached to a toy, he would never be able to let it go
I forgot I never explained the slight difference in Caleb calling you "colonel" in CN vs EN!
As a pretext, his colonel role in Chinese is called "执舰官 zhi jian guan", which translates to "ship commander" (I don't know why—I have near zero knowledge about the military in any language).
So like how it is in his birthday trailer, CN him calls you "小长官 xiao zhang guan" or "little commander/colonel". Adding "little" in front of a nickname makes it sound cuter, and it tends to be used by people who are older than you.
While the EN version makes it sound like you're on equal footing with him, the CN version highlights the fact that Caleb is the older one, the gege, and he's close enough to you to be able to tease you like that.
Naxv15 - #NANA
artist's twitter
urgent questions
A fanart I made of the medicine seller (series/Ri) because he was beautiful. And because I saw a lot of photos of geisha's on Pinterest and realized how amazing models/references they would be. So here he is💛
Going for a swim. Clip studio paint, 4 hours.
I’m curious, what’s Love and Deepspace?
It's a Chinese otome game that got really popular because it has like a hyper realistic style, nice visuals, a non chronologically told story across lifetimes and universes, featuring professional yearners such as
Alien Knight Prince who can teleport but takes public transit because he wants to be normal. Got hit by a car once and the guy who hit him wouldn't let him leave until his mom came and got him
President of Autism and holder of all knowledge ever, good at everything except for taking care of himself. Has a $16 starbucks order that is 110% sugar and like 4 cavities hes ignoring. Tried to quit his job and his boss said no, fuck you, see you Monday
Eccentric Mermaid with abandonment issues who can kill someone 132 different ways, has a dagger you can pull out of his tits. Will die if you dont pay attention to him and will also die if you leave him on a bicycle by himself
Described as an "unkillable monster" by the plot's big bad guy organization, single father of 3 and a disney princess. Wants you to break him like a horse. Likes classic cars, motorcycles, and guns, has exactly 0 licenses for anything.
Cyborg Airforce Bf with every mental disease, there's discourse about whether or not he's your brother but actually he's probably your clone. Was installed as a colonel in the universe's spaceforce by a cult but speaks in rawr XD on his completely public sns.
And then a coming soon graphic because I guess more boys are coming. I hope the next one is a fae or like fae adjacent and hes unemployed
I think my main issue with the way most adaptations treat Irene Adler (and even how a lot of people read her) goes beyond the fact that Holmes isn't sexually or romantically attracted to her. I mean, the complete disregard for any interpretation where Holmes is queer (be it gay or aroace, or whatever else), is a big part of my issue with it. But it's mainly, the complete disregard for Irene Adler as the person who outsmarted Holmes.
These people, and these adaptations present a Sherlock Holmes so enamoured, and so focused on repressing those feelings that he fails to see her plans and loses. That's incredibly insulting to Irene's character, I think, and to women in general, I could argue. These people can only accept that a woman outsmarted the "smartest man in the world", only if she did so by seducing him. There's no way Holmes could lose against a woman if he wasn't so conflicted about his feelings for her, if he wasn't so distracted by her beauty and by how much he wanted to sleep with her. There's no way a woman can be admired by her talent as a singer, by her intelligence and bravery for getting out of a shitty situation. There's no way!
And it really bothers me when adaptations just use her as a prop to spark a conversation about Holmes' sexuality. There are a lot of characters in the canon that are very much just props for something (I'm looking at you, Moriarty), and these characters get dragged out of the prop box and they're given backstories and connections to other cases just so that they can become characters. But Irene Adler, an already interesting and complex character, only get treated like "a beautiful woman, The Woman" because she's only there for Holmes to have a little sexuality crisis that he didn't even have!
Sherlock Holmes is truly every woman’s greatest fantasy: a sexist man gets humiliated by a woman much smarter than him and he responds by having a ton of respect for her and never being sexist ever again.
I still can’t believe that in the literal first paragraph of A Scandal in Bohemia they make it very clear that Sherlock Holmes doesn’t feel anything close to love or anything romantic towards Irene Adler, and adaptations STILL manage to fuck it up.
And I can’t believe a big part of the story is that Irene Adler got MARRIED to someone whom she loved and adaptations STILL manage to fuck that up.
I really feel like one of the best details in “A Scandal in Bohemia” that I never see people fixate on enough is that the story starts with Watson stopping in to see Holmes at Baker Street on a complete whim, because he happens to see that he’s home (and Watson is now married and living elsewhere). Like he doesn’t send word first, he’s not invited, he just shows up and surprises Holmes. Which is not that weird but then Holmes is like “oh good, I’ve got a case anyway, you might as well hang out!” which just makes it funnier when the King shows up and is like “I’d really rather speak to you alone, actually” and Watson tries to leave and Holmes is just like “anything you can say to me, you can say to my best friend John Watson, and if you ask him to leave, I would consider it a grave insult, you would be my enemy and I will not help you ever!!” And the king is like “…ok” and just moves on.
like, that is crazy behavior. Holmes is talking about how there’s probably lots of money in this case, and then almost turns away the client for…not knowing who the fuck Watson is?? He’s not even supposed to be there?? He just came to say hi?? “It is both or none”… girl, GET UP.
Okay but it's important to understand that this is also a power struggle between Holmes and the King of Bohemia. The King comes in disguise, lies about who he is, wants to control all details of the appointment and investigation. But Holmes is like, fuck no, that's not gonna fly both because it's bad for the investigation and also because it's personally insulting to me.
So he makes a point of almost turning the business away. Understand that Holmes is not your typical Victorian; he doesn't revere monarchy or nobility. He turns down a knighthood later in his career. He's described as Bohemian a few times because he has a countercultural aspect to him.
So this is not just about Watson, this is about Holmes' typical attitude towards assholes, especially high status ones.
Are you sure it's not because you're poor?
From Exteme Dose, Tamino ♥️
Mood tag: 😆 Silly
Thoughts about Sherlock Holmes, having now listened to several of the audiobooks of the original series by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
First and foremost, Sherlock is actually nice? Like, he is never deliberately rude to people. He can be quite blunt, direct and to the point, but he's never going out of his way to be rude or dismissive of people. (He has immense amounts of cheek and sass about the competencies of the police officers once they are no longer present, but he is always perfectly polite to them when they are speaking.)
He is especially kind to people in the cases that they are working on. He tries to be respectful of people, particularly those who have been traumatized by the event that they have just experienced. He is very kind to women, and has great admiration for smart and competent women that he encounters in his work, regardless of their social class. (In the adventure of the copper beeches, he allows the woman to take a suspicious job, because she is in desperate need of the money, but makes sure that he is available to her night or day in case she runs into any trouble.)
Sherlock genuinely likes John. They are actually best friends, and Sherlock treats him as such. Sherlock is proud of John when John figures things out and offers him sincere praise. Sherlock genuinely enjoys John's company and makes a point to express that fact on multiple occasions.
The cases are often simple, but never stupid. The cases are interesting to read, and it's satisfying as a reader when you figure something out alongside the characters but before the big reveal. They're not trying to twist you in knots, tricking you into thinking that your first thought is going to be absolutely wrong because it's way too obvious. The stories make sense, but are layered with more complexity and clues that you might not have caught.
Sherlock does a lot of moral questioning and struggles with some of the implications of the cases, such as the adventure of the Abbey Grange. In that case, a young woman's admirer murders the woman's abusive husband. Sherlock makes a point of not telling the police about it because he thinks that that would be the wrong thing to do. He lets the man go and encourages him and the young woman to make a better life for themselves. Sherlock quite openly struggles with the results of his cases, the implications of them, their impact on him and the people around him.
Sherlock openly admits to his faults. And not in an “oh I'm so much better than you all but I have to keep my mind occupied somehow” kind of way, he is quite willing to admit where he struggles and where he considers himself to be weaker, and often asks for help.
John Watson is very much an equal partner, and Sherlock is openly quite reliant on John for a lot of things. Obviously, Sherlock's detective abilities are the star of the show and that is what Watson focuses on in his recounting, but Sherlock actively seeks out John's involvement and opinions on the cases, and relies on John's protection and support on many occasions.
Anyways. I'm not entirely sure where the idea of “Sherlock Holmes the genius asshole” comes from but it's very distinctly NOT the impression I get from the original stories.
The way that most of Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories’ most horrible villains are rich dudes that are abusive to women, in a time such as the 1880’s, compels me.
There’s a whole subset of Sherlock Holmes stories that could be labeled Asshole Guys Try to Control Women’s Money.
Yup, there’s a huge number of times where Sherlock Holmes is the ONLY person to take a young woman’s complaint or worry seriously and finds out someone is up to some serious evil. Holmes also shows a lot of compassion and empathy with the victims over and over again. (This is why I find “Secretly a woman” or “Trans” Holmes headcanons much more convincing than “sociopath” Holmes.)
I am never going to shut up about how much I specifically love The Adventure of The Copper Beeches because it is literally Sherlock Holmes listening to a young lady he does not know except as a potential client, agreeing with her that a potential job she has interviewed for that she thinks is SUPER SKETCHY is, indeed, sketchy as fuck and when she says she’s probably gonna take the job anyways because the money is good and she needs it going “OKAY I GUESS but for the love of god please write to us so we know you’re okay we will literally drop everything and jump on a train if you want us to”.
The job turns out to indeed be sketchy as fuck, she writes to them, Holmes and Watson drop everything and jump on a train when she asks them to. I read this story for the first time when I was twelve and it made a HUGE impression.
This is also the basis for a lot of speculation about Holmes’ family life. The idea that he has been a victim of abuse, or his mother was abused (or even murdered by his father.) There’s definitely SOMETHING that makes him very aware of how dangerous isolated families can be, and the dark things that can happen behind closed doors. Plus, of course, the motivation to devote himself to stopping crime. And yes, so much of it is of the personal type.
dude see this is one aspect of the original books i NEVER understand why modern remakes (cough cough) don’t go all in on. Like, in the 21th c we HAVE all the dumb forensic shit that made Victorian Holmes stand out, but we STILL DON’T HAVE uh….you know, compassion for women and minorities, or the willingness to believe them, adequate community support for domestic violence or hate crimes, etc. etc. which you’d think is exactly where a renegade consulting detective would come in handy. A good modern day Sherlock Holmes remake, instead of trying to convince us that Holmes is some super genius for being better than fingerprint analysis or whatever, could have him just be…a good person who helps out people the police can’t and won’t help. There you go. That’s how to write a relevant modern Holmes.
One thing that annoys me is how much the BBC version of Sherlock (and the fandom around it) focus on police cases or cold cases. In the stories, Holmes’ bread and butter cases had fuck-all to do with the police and in a few stories, he actively works around/against them, or outright lies to them. Of the many, many things I wish that show had done differently, this is one is particularly obnoxious since it’s such a gimme.
There were very few actual murder cases in the Canon, and Holmes handled them either one of two ways:
Option one: The murder victim was innocent while the killer was an abusive bastard, see Speckled Band. Conclusion, arrest and have the killer charged (Or in the case of Speckled Band, indirectly murder him yourself then shrug and go home)
Option two: The victim was murdered to protect someone that the victim was abusing, or for vengeance, see Boscombe Valley, Devil’s Foot, Abbey Grange. Conclusion, Oops, I don’t know who the killer is, I am suddenly incompetent, oh look a pheasant.
#my favorite murder in holmes canon#is when they straight up witness a lady murder her blackmailer#do nothing except destroy his other blackmail material#and then straight up lie to lestrade about it#sherlock holmes#more of this in modern adaptations pls (via @cactusspatz )
Let’s not forget the time Holmes helps a young woman who’s being catfished by her own stepfather to steal her inheritance, and when the villain sneers that the law can’t touch him, Holmes grabs a horsewhip out of sheerest chivalry.
So, the most canon-accurate iteration of Sherlock Holmes in the last few decades is actually Benoit Blanc….
I think it’s also important to note, and complicates our ideas about what the highly patriarchal/misogynistic society of 19th century England looked like, that these stories SOLD
they were POPULAR
the Victorians LIKED reading about women who won out over shitty men in their lives, even when that plotline reaffirmed a woman’s power and agency or put an active sexist in his place (ie Irene Adler besting Holmes)
which is fascinating in light of. you know. [gestures broadly at all of Victorian gender dynamics, laws, etc.]
So yes, Benoit Blanc is the best modern Sherlock.
❤︎ Everyday something that have a heart
Day 78
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