its important to have games on your wishlist that keep going on sale every couple of months and you still never buy it

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Keni

JVL
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Three Goblin Art

Product Placement
art blog(derogatory)
noise dept.
styofa doing anything
trying on a metaphor

@theartofmadeline
todays bird

tannertan36

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Cosmic Funnies

Kiana Khansmith
Misplaced Lens Cap
Show & Tell

★
Stranger Things
seen from Türkiye

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@silverdrake
its important to have games on your wishlist that keep going on sale every couple of months and you still never buy it
Just losing my mind at the implications that the companions have all been trying to help Rook grieve Varric, and Rook doesn’t know
Emmrich, wise and long-familiar with grief, being told by Neve and Harding what happened; understanding why sometimes he overhears Rook’s muffled voice in the Infirmary, talking to no one. He takes Rook to the Memorial Gardens and mentions he talks to his parents, thinking Rook might be comfortable with the same. Rook lights candles and rings bells but Emmrich watches, sorrowed, to see Rook still seems in deep denial.
Neve takes Rook to the Wall of Light; a Shadow Dragon Rook knows just what this means but any Rook can understand the solemnity, the power of remembrance. Neve reenergizes Brom’s light and looks to Rook, hoping Rook will mention wanting to make one for Varric. Rook is kind and comforting to Neve, but Neve is lost in wondering why Rook doesn’t take the chance to open up. She can’t figure it. Maybe Rook just can’t face it, not yet. Maybe Rook does something privately. She isn’t sure but it nags at her.
Davrin’s not big on talking about feelings. He’d rather just move on. But he sees the way Rook seems a little hollow sometimes, a little distant; he sees how Rook takes so quickly to Assan. “Hey Rook,” he says, and invites them to come with him and Assan to safe places in Arlathan, where the woods are clean and green and growing, where real sunlight dapples through the trees. Rook always seems to love these outings, seems lighter afterwards. But Davrin feels a little confused in that Rook never seems to realize the outings are mostly for them.
Taash is another person not big on feelings. But they know how much feelings can twist you up and mess with your head. When Lace tells them about Varric they feel badly for Rook, and think to how they feel when they’re struggling. Epic fights, dragon fights, drinks with the Lords. Taash is perfectly capable of doing all that on their own. But maybe bringing Rook along will help get them out of their head a little bit. Does it help? Taash isn’t sure.
Bellara’s double-versed in grief after what happens to Cyrian. Rook helped her through trying to reach him, and Bellara wonders, in her own pain, if she can help Rook a little bit too. Especially if Rook is elven, teaching Rook about the braziers and the challenges is another tool she can share about her or their people, another way that might help Rook with their grief. Neve’s told her that the Wall of Light didn’t seem to help Rook much, but maybe a different funeral tradition could help them instead. Rook helps her light the braziers and Bellara feels her heart lightening, though she wonders at Rook, who seems more moved by Bellara’s reactions than anything else.
Lucanis is nearly as allergic to dealing with feelings as Davrin is, but he immediately clocks how Neve and Harding are acting, and asks what happened before he joined them. They tell him about Varric and that they’re worried about Rook, that Rook seems to just be shoving those feelings down without dealing with them. Lucanis is no stranger to that, but while it’s fine for him, he doesn’t want to see someone who risked their life to save him share that struggle. He brings Rook to Caterina’s funeral planning to show Rook it’s okay to admit the loss and honor it. When that doesn’t seem to make a dent, he falls back to his standard - lavish meals, small gifts, coffee. He knows it would help him. He just wishes it helped Rook too.
Lace hurts the worst after losing Varric and Lace is where Solas’ magic comes the closest to faltering. Rook can see Lace is down, she’s quiet, she’s afraid after what happens with the gods escaping; but Solas’ magic holds and Rook can still never see quite why. Lace would love to sit over drinks one night and share stories about Varric, but she sees that Rook doesn’t seem ready, and she doesn’t want to push. Instead she writes letters to Ma, to the Inquisitor, to Cassandra, to Aveline, maybe even to Hawke. She writes out her stories with Varric’s old quill and she carries a bolt of Bianca with her. A dozen times she goes to talk to Rook about him, and when she tries Rook turns away or changes the subject. It hurts, but Lace knows she can’t make Rook talk about him, and she hopes in time it will get better.
This just absolutely crushes me the more I think about it 😭
Edit: Varric’s death is Rook’s personal companion quest every other single companion tries to help them with, and can’t 😭😭😭
Aren‘t we all Rook here?
Thanks, this absolutely obliterated me.
The rest of the thread is here.
tl;dr: Don’t monetize AO3, kids. You won’t like what happens next.
read this thread. this is by far the most concise explanation of a lot of different issues that i’ve seen in fandom spaces in a while. cosigning both the linked thread and the thread about aus/uk/can law that’s linked in-thread.
AHDHXHEBSG TWITTER WRITERS DID WHAT NOW???? AND PEOPLE PAID THEM????
If someone has never taken a class that includes copyright law, they may not know this stuff, so I don’t necessarily blame random people for not knowing what copyright is, but like… maybe just maybe it’s something that should be taught????
Just another reminder, because this always drives me crazy, but even if monetizing your fic was 100% unambiguously legal and protected, AO3 would still not let you do it because AO3 was founded and is supported by people like me who want a fandom community that is completely divested from making money off of fic.
Yes, this. Lots of fanworks on AO3 are unambiguously legal. Fics based on Shakespeare plays and fairy tales and Greek mythology and The Great Gatsby and your original character from your D&D game are not violations of copyright, because no copyright applies to those things.
AO3 still doesn’t let you monetize those things on the site, because we don’t want the site to be commercial! Because that’s not what it’s for!
It’s not there for you (generic you) to make money off the efforts of the people who build and maintain the site for free! We aren’t getting paid for the work we do to give you a nice site to use, just like you aren’t getting paid for the work you do to create whatever art you share there. Because fandom is supposed to be a community where we share with each other, and therefore we all benefit.
The deal is, we give you a free, stable, safe platform to host your works. In exchange, you get a site that isn’t covered in ads and tip jars and links to gofundme and “read the next chapter at my patreon”. You get one goddamn place on the internet that isn’t trying to make money off you. And we will defend that space and keep it non-commercial.
AO3 was born EXPLICITLY to avoid this. Learn our history, read about FanLib, Astolat post, the fact that someone tried to make fanfic into something immediately lucrative, but - oh surprise! - not for the authors, never for the authors, in the end, and never with any sensible legal coverage or plan, no sir. And nowadays we basically gave in to the fact that we create content for free, to be monetized by the platform we use, in the vague hope that someday we will get some of that cake or at least get to smell the icing, but AO3 stays different. AO3 knows where it comes from and what it needs to do to survive, and, peeps, it’s FANFICTION. The moment you start trying to systematically profit from it, you get into the tunnel of horrors of copyright. There are ways around it, sure. Like I said: doing things the way they do on meta or tiktok or other places, where technically you’re not giving people fics in exchange for money, but you talk about them, make vids about the stories, memes, content, and make the platform some money and then maybe you’ll get some if you get enough people to watch it and share it and make the platform some more money. Not ideal, tbh. Let AO3 stay the way it is. It’s a miracle, it’s a bastion, one of the few places on the web where there are no paywalls, subscription fees, premiums and all that jazz. You want to contribute to the expenses? You do it. You don’t want to? It’s fine. But don’t ask people for money, because it fucks up things for everyone. Simple as that.
Meiji period fashion was some of the best in the world, speaking purely from an aesthetic standpoint you can really see the collision of European and Japanese standards of beauty and how their broad agreement even in particulars (the similarity between Japanese and Gibson girl bouffants, the obi vs the corset, the obi knot vs the bustle, the mutual covetousness for exotic textiles, the feverish swapping of both art styles and subjects) combined and produced some of the most interesting cultural exchange we have this level of documentation for. Europeans were wearing kimono or adapting them into tea gowns, japanese were pairing lacy Edwardian blouses with skirt hakama and little button up boots. haori jackets with bowler hats and European style lapels. if steampunk was any good as an aesthetic it would steal wholesale from the copious records we have in both graphic arts and photography of how people were dressing in this milieu.
«The botany professor,» from Kkokei Shimbun, October 20, 1908. she's wearing a kimono blouse or haori, edwardian skirt or hakama, gibson girl bouffant, a lacy high-collar blouse with cravat and brooch, and a pocket watch with chain
1910-1930 (Taishō era, right after Meiji, which I should have included in my OP) men's haori with western lapels
I have a love for both kimonos and bustle dresses, so I love seeing how the two fashions influenced each other over this period. And thanks to Pinterest, I have pictures!
Victorian tea gown that clearly started as a kimono. It still has the long furisode sleeves, but now they’re gathered at the shoulder and turned around so that the long open side is facing the front instead of the back. Similarly the back is taken in with curved seams to fit the torso and pleated below that for the skirt.
Woodblock of a woman in a a bustle dress made with colorful patterned fabrics and examples of how a woman could style her hair with it.
More prints to showcase hairstyles, two women wearing western wear and two women wearing kimonos.
This next one’s modern, but it involves hoopskirts so I’ll add it in because it makes me so happy. There’s been different styles of wedding fashion that take kimonos and give them a more modern look. Often this involves taking a kimono and then cutting and resewing it into a new dress. Very pretty, but it can’t ever be worn like a traditional kimono again. But now there’s another trend where the bride wears a hoopskirt with a white skirt, then you take the kimono and drape it on. The back of the kimono covers the front of the dress, the long sleeves fall across the sides or the back, and you still wear an obi with it. The result is pretty and the kimono itself doesn’t have to be altered at all.
And because you mentioned steampunk, I have to add in these two:
Personally I’m a big fan of Taisho Meisen kimono, which are what happen when the Japanese textile industry abruptly gets access to aniline dyes, new spinning and weaving technology, and the concept of Art Deco:
the rodents of unusual size in princess bride should have just been like. a capybara. i’m not suggesting wesley should have fought a capybara, i’m saying they should have been terrified of the prospect of encountering one and then they see it off in the distance in the dark and they’re like “OH NO” and it’s just sitting there like (^-__-^) and buttercup is like “it’s cute. maybe it’s harmless?” and wesley is like “NO. the myths” and ominous music plays under a slow zoom on the capybara’s face while they carefully edge their way around it and it’s just sitting there like (^-__-^) the whole time. then they breathe a sigh of relief and immediately fall into quicksand. thank you. other than reintroducing the chapter on hats, this is the only change i would make and comprises the entirety of my princess bride script doctor
this – and this is crucial – is still immediately preceded by the line “i don’t think they exist”
New Star Trek spinoff idea: This
I’m weak.
I got another one
you’ve heard of Ocean’s 8, get ready for-
oh my GOD-
Vox Machina....FUCK. SHIT. UUUUUPPPPP!
Please give credit if you use my gifs.
I always forget that gas giants are, you know, made of gas, and not just smooth plastic color. The atmosphere is full of clouds, and the entire planet is atmosphere!
Girl, help they are making me do tasks before the scheduled event.
My conference is in 9 hours; do I have time to bathe?
Cats never understand that you're helping them get their claws unstuck from fabric. They're just like "you're tormenting me at the worst possible time I hate you"
Some additional comments about Sudowrite, hopefully of use to people.
1. There’s not a lot of point in locking your works. The AI has been trained. It’s done. Not only that, but the data itself remains archived and can be reused.
2. The algorithm in question is a bigger project called GPT-3, which gets its training data from a resource called Common Crawl. Common Crawl basically trawls everything on the web and is how search engines (including Google) index content. So it’s probably not that the people behind it have intentionally targeted AO3, though I am fascinated by the high specificity of fandom content in my results.
3. That’s going to make things difficult for AO3 staff to prevent, though, because as mentioned, if you make it so Common Crawl can’t look at the site at all, pages will no longer show up in searches at all.
4. This is understandably creepy as all hell, but my personal opinion is that locking my fanworks will do me more harm than leaving them open.
5. Action is needed to address the root problem of these AI training datasets in all fields, but I don’t think focusing on the ethical or artistic arguments is the way to change things. I think we should be leaning hard on IP and copyright law here. You can’t copyright a sentence or a phrase, but once you get enough individual factors together (character names, similarity of narrative, concepts) it starts to get dicey. So for example, if Sudowrite always gives a character named Harry glasses and black hair… well we all know why that is but it’s unlikely to be actionable.
If Sudowrite always associates a character named Harry with characters named Hermione, Neville, and Sirius, and consistently produces concepts like wands, potions, schools, etc… it starts to look like the kind of problem IP holders may take an interest in. Sudowrite claims that all its text is original and not directly lifted from anywhere - which may be technically true - but ironically, copyright and IP law is based on the whole of a work and its context… and if the AI can’t help but imitate those works and contexts, things are going to get interesting.
6. While Elon Musk is eminently blameable for all things, he doesn’t have any personal involvement here as far as I know, these people have just got some of his money.
While travel guides are having a difficult time, it may be the chance to explore charming new destinations you can visit without the need to move from home…
Let me reblog some old stuff that I still think wasn’t that bad. It’s a way to re-introduce myself. Kinda.
I made a YT vid out of one of my Dragon Age rants. Enjoy my weird accent and sad editing skills.
godDAMNit that's the stuff.
thoughts on doctor who?
Is that another Tumblr imaginary movie?
No, that's Dr. Gorv. Dr. Who is a movie about the russian Bolshevik revolution starring Julie Christie and Omar Sharif
No, you’re thinking of Doctor Zhivago. Dr Who is a satirical comedy movie about the Cold War and nuclear destruction.
That's actually Doctor Strangelove. Doctor Who wrote a bunch of children's books to help kids learn to read.
No, that's almost definitely Doctor Seuss. Doctor Who was a song by the Thompson Twins.
You're thinking of Doctor! Doctor! Neil. Doctor Who is about a brilliant but arrogant surgeon who, following a car crash that eliminates his chance of ever doing surgery again, turns to mysticism.
Close! That’s Doctor Strange. Doctor Who is the Dutch expert in law, philosophy, science, and metaphysics who, along with a solicitor, a train fiend, an administrator of an insane asylum, a nobleman, and a cowboy, hunts down and kills a notorious vampire.
Almost! That's Doctor Seward from Dracula. I think you mean the guy who suppressed all his urges and made a scientific potion to create a second identity for the sole purposes or letting out his base urges
Pretty sure that’s Dr. Jekyll. Dr. Who is that guy who dug up a bunch of corpses and sewed together a monster
You probably mean Dr. Frankenstein. Doctor Who is the guy who can talk to animals.
Doctor Dolittle? Doctor Who was a real person, guys, he was a Scottish missionary who was thought missing for some years before a reporter found him. The phrase “Doctor Who, I presume?” is attributed to this incident.
I can see where you're coming from but I am pretty sure that is Doctor Livingstone you are thinking of.
Doctor Who is not a person, but a real life organization that strives to provide impartial medical relief to the victims of war, disease, and natural or man-made disaster, without regard to race, religion, or political affiliation.
Pretty sure you're thinking of Doctors Without Borders. Doctor Who is the guy on first base.