I've aged another year, I feel 40 years old x) Happy Valentine's day to you and don't forget to feed your dragons

#batman#dc#dc comics#bruce wayne#dick grayson#tim drake#dc fanart#batfamily#batfam

seen from China
seen from India
seen from China
seen from Canada
seen from Sweden
seen from Hungary
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Poland

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Hungary
seen from China

seen from Germany

seen from United States
I've aged another year, I feel 40 years old x) Happy Valentine's day to you and don't forget to feed your dragons
The Likeness of the Ruling Stewards: A History of Private Portraiture in the Late Third Age
This concept is rather convoluted but the basic premise is that Ruling Stewards had to cultivate a culture of projected modesty and an insistence on never elevating themselves to the role of 'King' by rejecting such self adulation as, for example, official portraiture. Hence, most if not all of the images Gondor has of Stewards passed comes from the intimate studies or sketches of them from their family and friends. In the Fourth Age a scholar of Pelargir named Amlugniben requested the House of Hurin's permission to copy, research and compile the best of these images into a book and they were (eventually) granted that allowance. And so I... am making an effort to... make that... myself... SO HERE'S PART ONE
the line of elros ❖ stewards of gondor ❖ headcanon disclaimer
Mardil Voronwë was the son of Vorondil, and became the first Ruling Steward of Gondor. He served as the third and last Steward to Eärnil II and after him his son Eärnur. Upon Eärnur’s inheritance, the Witch-king of Minas Morgul, whom Eärnur had faced in the North, challenged him again to single combat. Eärnur, rash and humiliated by his failure in their first encounter, was eager to answer, but all his counselors clearly saw that it was a trap. It took the combined persuasion of Eärnur’s mother, lover, and his Steward to convince him not to go at that time, but after his lover was slain in a skirmish, not even the wisdom of Mardil could prevent him from answering the Witch-king’s third challenge. Eärnur left his crown upon the lap of his father in the Houses of the Dead, where it would remain until Steward Faramir would pass it to King Elessar nearly a thousand years later. Eärnur rode past the gates of Minas Morgul with a small escort of loyal knights, never to be seen again. As his fate was for a time uncertain and Eärnur had named no heir, nor were there any obvious lords of royal descent to step forth and make their claim, no new King was selected. Thus, with a heavy heart, Mardil took up the leadership of Gondor, first of the Ruling Stewards. He began his rule with the promise to lead “until the King returns,” at first with the hope that Eärnur would ride back to Minas Tirith in glory, and later as but a formality. Mardil ruled Gondor with wisdom and patience during the time known as the Watchful Peace, earning the epithet Voronwë, “the Steadfast.” He was an even-tempered and practical man who paid close attention to even the minutiae of bureaucracy. His wife Anoriel was likewise a fastidious scholar, and it was at her suggestion that Mardil established a Stewards’ Reckoning of time, inserting two leap-days in an effort to maintain a coherent calendar. The son of Mardil Voronwë and Anoriel was Eradan, first of the Stewards to be named in Sindarin save for those who had taken names from great heroes of the First Age. Eradan was a solitary man who preferred quietude and the company of books. His wife, Gilwen, was of a similar mind, and together they agreed to leave one another alone as soon as their only son Herion came of age. Unlike his father, Herion was a lively and boisterous man eager to enter the social circles of Gondor. He wed the dancer Cadwareth, a beautiful woman whom he adored despite her own inconstant affections. Their son Belegorn was a hunter like his ancestor Vorondil, and though he never brought down a beast so mighty as the Kine of Araw, he carried the Horn of Gondor with a reverence matched only by his love for his wife Lossendil, a healer-woman of Ithilien he met on his travels.
Things happen x)
🌻🌸
Watched the Fallout series with some friends. We loved it so much I couldn't get past that favorite universe and put them in there x) I'm not entirely sure about the horns, so I left it both ways. They're not deathclaws, but their dna was used to create new and improved bilogical weapons, with the goal of making more intelligent creatures to make them easier to control. However, the humans screwed up again and the specimens got loose.
I've been trying to combine death/gator claws and make them more dragon-like x)
'mine'
not to say that they're often in competition... but sometimes there are moments of the greedy beast~
snack duel I think we all know who would have won that fight november's scene from patreon/boosty