Poking people with sticks so they look at my oc art/silly

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Poking people with sticks so they look at my oc art/silly
hi guys! i am making a cartoon!
here's the trailer if you're interested!
American Girl Historical OCs: Zabel Gevorgyan, 1992
Zabel Gevorgyan leaves Armenia for the United States with her parents and studious seventeen year old sister Siranush following the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union. Her family already survived the devastating 1988 Spitak earthquake, and Zabel’s parents are raising her to see herself as strong and a survivor, but the uncertainty, war, and political instability in post-Soviet life leads her family to want a new beginning. In her new home of Watertown, Massachusetts, Zabel finds that the Armenian-American community she now lives in is welcoming, and she easily makes new friends at school, even if learning to read and write in English is difficult for her. The unusual 1992 Presidential election also teaches Zabel a lot of things about America she hadn’t known. Zabel initially has trouble relating to her new American friends and neighbors despite sharing a cultural background with many of them, and doesn’t know how to talk to them about her life, but gradually learns to open up to others and even finds new talents in helping her Armenian-American friends learn the Armenian language, and running on the school track team. But Zabel doesn’t know how to help her sister, who she’s always looked up to, when Siranush begins experiencing severe trauma symptoms, staying in her room all the time and refusing to go outside or talk to anyone. Zabel learns that life in America is often unpredictable, but that having to be strong does not mean having to be powerless in the face of adversity.
Welcome Zack to the doll family!
Like the rest of the moddie squad, he's in middle school and this is his first year of going as himself. He's both nervous and excited to be using the name he chose and dressing how he wants, but Zack has some great friends by his side.
He's a custom boy I found on mercari. He looked so much like me that I just had to bring him home. Poor guy had very floppy limbs and some ink stains but the limbs are fixed and the stains are clearing up. So now Elliz, my former lookalike has a twin brother.
Oc thing bc it’s my birthday I can do what I want‼️
Oc height chart/reference thing
Should probably make an introduction post since I haven’t yet lol
But yeah hi!! I’m Freakaz0id but just call me Avery!
I am a transmasc certified silly Billy(real)
Taken by @sillylittlebunnygal 🫶🫶🫶
I am autistic so tone tags are appreciated when necessary.
I draw a lot! Mostly fanart but I also am trying to make some original art too!
Oc art tag:
#agoc #a game of chance
I have many interests including tadc, raggedy Ann and Andy, animaniacs, rottmnt/tmnt, and smiling friends(and more)
Feel free to send asks! I’m usually bored and am more than happy to respond to random questions/comments!
DNI:
•Basic dni criteria(r@cists, h0mophobes, etc.)
•Prosh1ppers, n3utrals
•Any rottmnt april x turtle shippers (she canonically sees them as brothers!!)
•vizviep0p defenders
•z1onists(you suck)
Check out my Etsy shop ‼️‼️
Shop items by Freakaz0idartz.
Anyways I think that’s it thanks for reading!!!
American Girl Historical OCs: Estelle Woodward, 1918
Estelle Woodward loves life in her hometown of Oaks Bluff, Martha’s Vineyard, where she can hear and smell the ocean from her family’s cottage. She can spend hours on the beach with her best friend Pearl Powell, the daughter of the reverend at the church she goes to, or even by herself, where she enjoys collecting shells, reading her favorite fairy tale books, drawing and painting her surroundings, and even swimming if it isn’t too cold. Estelle is shy and reserved, having never left the Vineyard, but loves to hear about the world outside the island from the many summer tourists who come to stay at her family’s inn, a place renowned among the local and broader African-American community. Secretly, she hopes that one day she can paint something beautiful and special, something that will make other people see what she sees, that will be displayed in one of the great museums on the mainland she’s heard about. But in 1918, things are different from what Estelle is used to. Even on Sundays, the church sermons that Estelle once found to be uplifting feel sad when she prays every week for her eighteen year old brother Eugene’s safe return from the Western Front of the Great War, only to hear frightening news in the papers every day that Estelle can’t tear herself away from even when she wants to. Pearl tells Estelle that she believes women’s suffrage is imminent, which means that someday they can have more of a say in what goes on in the world, but Estelle feels that even if that’s true, it’s too far ahead in the future to make her feel better. When the war ends and Eugene returns home in physical health but mental turmoil, unable to sleep at night and haunted by the horrors he witnessed, Estelle is confused and upset, losing interest in many of her favorite pastimes, even when her parents and Pearl try to help lift her spirits. But when Eugene, not having lost faith in Estelle’s gifts, encourages her to start painting again and Estelle agrees only if he does it with her, she realizes that in bonding through art, she and her family can begin to heal together.