Serial investor.
额妹子嘤!
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
noise dept.

No title available

No title available
DEAR READER
sheepfilms

tannertan36
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Jules of Nature

★
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
YOU ARE THE REASON
Show & Tell
d e v o n
🪼
AnasAbdin

Discoholic 🪩

PR's Tumblrdome
No title available
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Mexico

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from Mexico

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Mexico

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from India
@shirleysod
Serial investor.
额妹子嘤!
soon.
Marvelous works!
i’m still getting notes asking to draw more of this pairing so here ya go!
😍😍😍
Want more! 🦁🐏
I hope you all grow to be great leaders and bosses, if that’s what you want to be of course. :D
really cute(ˊᵒ̴̶̷̤ ꇴ ᵒ̴̶̷̤ˋ) ꒰
😘😘😘
sign me up tho
Why I love yoga so much. :p
😉😉😉
The Great Red Dragon‘s eyelashes~~~
Richard just looks like Samuraki Hanamichi! so cute!
excited!!!
A grant from the NHPRC enabled Syracuse to conduct detailed description and preservation rehousing of 134 collections documenting American cartoons and cartoonists from the 20th century.
Comic-Con 2015 opens tomorrow in San Diego, so we thought it was an appropriate time to celebrate one of the first comic strips in America: The Yellow Kid.
A bald kid with big ears and a gap-toothed grin, Mickey Dugan appeared regularly in a loosely connected series of cartoons named “Hogan’s Alley” for its New York tenement locale. The Yellow Kid, as he later came to be known for his bright yellow nightshirt, became, with his 17 February 1895 debut in Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World, the first comic character to serve as a marketing tool for the sale of newspapers.
In 1992, eleven original pen-and-ink drawings by the Yellow Kid’s creator R.F. Outcault were discovered among the archival records of Street and Smith housed in the Special Collections Research Center at Syracuse University. A major publisher of its era, Street and Smith had acquired Howard, Ainslee and Company, a firm that, capitalizing on the success of the comic strip, issued a short-lived children’s periodical, the Yellow Kid, for which Outcault supplied the cover illustrations.
The Special Collections Research Center (http://library.syr.edu/…/subje…/cartoons-and-cartoonists.php) is home to over 200 manuscript collections consisting primarily of original artwork used for daily comic strips and editorial cartoons. In addition to printed materials that document particular cartoon titles, we hold a few collections of sports cartoons and magazine cartoons, as well as histories of cartooning and cartoonists.
Popular favorites such as Bud Fisher’s Mutt and Jeff, Mort Walker’s Beetle Bailey, and Bil Keane’s Family Circus are represented in the SCRC holdings along with sequential continuity (soap opera) strips such as George Wunder’s Terry and the Pirates and Paul Norris’s science fiction strip Brick Bradford. Some collections contain correspondence with fans, political figures, and other cartoonists, while others contain printing proofs and other primary source materials.
(⊙o⊙)哦!
Lee Pace #10
help!!!
beautiful finger!
Weibo. Makes me. Cry.
😂😂😂😂😂
Lee Pace #09
his smile!😚😚😚
Richard Armitage dances like a dad, John Bell shows us exactly how much like a dad. (x)
😁😁😁cute!
RA won't be going to the Oliviers :( and I thought he was going to bring LP. *cries*
I never thought he was going to bring LP but man, does him not being able to go suck or what?
Read More
big hug!