Ironic how someone called Eärendil the Mariner has sired a long line of dedicated horse girls.

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Singapore
seen from Türkiye

seen from Sri Lanka
seen from Pakistan

seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from United States
seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Singapore

seen from South Korea
seen from Yemen

seen from United Kingdom
seen from South Korea
seen from China

seen from United States
Ironic how someone called Eärendil the Mariner has sired a long line of dedicated horse girls.
I think this is the most effort I’ve put into a page in my current sketchbook (although it is a new sketchbook)
I hope to make some lil comics with these guys :3 (more characters to come)
Maybe there’s a monster inside all of us.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Something is up with Maglor. Elrond tries to get to the bottom of it.
"why you believe in the dwarf-elf friendship?"
bro. he was going to say his real name to him. the real name which only family members know.
Elron System Map (Estonia)
Buy this map on posters, shirts, and more: https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/104238761
Märkus: ma räägin null eesti keelt. Vabandan kirjavigade ja kehva grammatika pärast.
Here’s my take on a system map of Estonia’s national railway Elron! Or, well, I suppose “map” is a bit of a stretch here, because it doesn’t even come close to representing the country’s geography. I’d originally planned a schematic map more in the style of my depiction of Morocco’s ONCF network, but there was so much whitespace that I decided a tree diagram would be more fitting. This actually harkens back to some of my earliest mapmaking inspirations—such as this Metro-North map by Robert McConnell, and the almost-matching MBTA map that seems to have disappeared from the internet.
When it comes to the Elron network itself, the service patterns are actually pretty cleanly designed. As such, I decided to show all of them—every single stopping pattern used by every train on the network. (Right down to having a separate route for the Tallinn-Turba trains that skip Jaanika, for instance.) On most networks of this size, this is a really bad idea simply due to the sheer number of various stopping patterns—but since this network had relatively few of them, and since I was already using a tree diagram, it was completely achievable here. I also added a table of daily outbound/inbound service frequencies, with separate columns for Monday to Thursday, Friday, Saturday/holidays, and Sunday.
The Ⓛ symbol indicates stations with short platforms, which apparently are really short—the timetables say that the doors will only open on one car. This was included on the timetables, but I figured it’d be worth including here too—there was plenty of room for it, after all.
If any Estonian folks see any errors here, please don’t hesitate to let me know; my ask box is open!
tipptunni rong nõksatab paldiski poole kontrolör läheneb mina kaugenen pilet maksab südametunnistuse hinna ... odavalt saadud
Elron: *posturing ridiculously* Don’t cross me! I’ve got the power of God and Saber on my side!!
Kalten: Should we point out that we’re church knights?
Elron: *Defiant scream*