Tiger, my Yautja blorbo. Badlands reawakened my predator hyperfixation... also Doc for scale.
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Tiger, my Yautja blorbo. Badlands reawakened my predator hyperfixation... also Doc for scale.
A new fantastical uniquities poster! Really enjoyed pairing the typefaces and art for this concept.
Art credits: Chaoclypse. Map elements by Kyle Latino / Map Crow (https://mapcrow.itch.io/), CC-BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), modified. Steven Colling. Maciej Zagorski / The Forge Studios. Compass rose by Art SilverGlass.
Fonts: FS Alvar, Lovecraft's Diary, Pathways, Passage.
This design dabbling was all about aligning and masking the more than 100 graphical elements. Lots of layers, for map features, the eye in the compass rose, the title text, the magnification effect, the foreground elements obscuring the stem of the magnifying glass, the sepia elements, the papyrus pattern, etc.
Pretty happy with this one overall, although I went over my two hour time limit. The 'Pathways' font (which looks like it has circles missing) was such a great find for the concept. I can see some of the poster's flaws, but a lot of the things I tried seemed to work.
Evgeny Romanov
Concept Artist
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The Long Memory of Water
They always come back to me. Even when they pretend to forget, they come back.
Sometimes they sing. Sometimes they scream. Sometimes they don’t make a sound at all.
But I hear them.
I have no mouth, no tongue, no hands to pray with.
Only current. Only flow. Only the long memory of water.
I remember the first boy who bled into me. His blood was thin and sweet. It didn’t stay red for long, the river never lets a color stay what it started as.
I remember the girl who dropped her shoes, walked barefoot into me, said she needed to feel something clean after what happened behind the laundromat.
I remember the songs they used to sing from the banks when the air was thick with cotton and grief, and the trees knew better than to ask questions.
The body of a Black man, tied to a cotton sack filled with stones. They said it was suicide. The sack said otherwise. He drifted in my arms for three days before a child found him snagged beneath the cypress roots.
His mother came to my bank, wearing her church dress and a fury she refused to speak aloud. She knelt in the mud. She did not cry. Just whispered, “I know you saw.” And I had.
I remember the children that summer, splashing through me just one week before they were found in a ditch. I remember laugher, and their voices.
One liked jazz. One liked baseball. The other wrote poems in the margins of his Bible.
They laughed in the shallows, like the world would always let them.
Someone threw a bloodied shoe into me. Not because it belonged to them, but because guilt is heavier than leather.
I carried it anyway.
I remember the older gentleman, tied to a fence and beaten not far from my bend. The rain came days later, washing his blood washed into as if the sky itself refused to let it dry.
A girl from town dropped in a rosary. Didn’t say a word. Just stood there in the storm, fists clenched so tightly, I thought she’d split her palms open.
I took the rosary. Let it float. It still glints under moonlight, if you know where to look.
And I remember the bridge.
How it groaned under the weight of hope and bodies. How feet thudded like heartbeats. How the tear gas floated down softly, like clouds that had forgotten how to be gentle.
They came rushing into me that day, some crawling, some stumbling, some carrying others who could no longer carry themselves.
They didn’t ask me to save them.
They asked me to hold what they no longer could.
And so I did.
I held shoes. Bibles. Gloves. Teeth.
A paper flag that refused to sink, no matter how deeply I pulled.
A yellow scarf snagged on a limb, just below the surface, fluttering gently, like something remembering who it belonged to.
But I remember clearly.
I remember them all. The singers and the silent, the drowned and the delivered, the ones who jumped and the ones who were thrown.
______________________________________
This story is a part of The Bridge Stayed Still, a lyrical series exploring Black memory, trauma, protest and resilience. Each piece stands alone, yet together they form an interconnected mosaic… fractured glimpses that reveal both the innocence of childhood as it’s confronted by history and the quiet testimonies of overlooked witnesses.
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
Have you read Explorations (Danny Phantom)?
Yes, I am/was in the fandom
Yes, but I’m not in the fandom
No, but I’m in the fandom
No, I’m not in the fandom
Summary: The invitation to join the quest—or hunt or whatever—in the Ghost Zone was only the start of it, but with Sam and Tucker by his side, Danny figured everything would be fine—especially when the ghosts were obligated to play nice. Of course, that doesn’t mean that the Ghost Zone itself is harmless….
Author: @ladylynse
No, that's not how you do it. You can't bring in your light to know her dark, her dark would simply vanish and disappear at the sight of your light. You must bring in your darkness to explore her dark. That's how you do it!
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