I love him soo much 🤲
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
I love him soo much 🤲
Colt in a war setting 🙌 I think it's very important that Isayama shows us a real war, men against men.. And Colt is such a wonderful character, a smart and brave soldier 💛 He doesn't like war, but always ready to stand against the enemy to protect his comrades and family 🥺
Kimball for @gemoglobinchik It was a pleasure to draw him!!!
Pock sketch
morning
The city of Vitebsk stirred. In this provincial "hole" with a population of almost a hundred thousand, where once upon a time, some Yury Klever stagnated and the itinerant artists still continue their miserable existence--today, in the days of October, the wide-ranging Revolutionary Art is in full swing.
Marc Chagall
There was something in Vitebsk's air, that inspired not only artists, who were naturally born in Vitebsk, but also those who were strangers in this city. Even those who saw it occasionally left memories of their own 'images of Vitebsk'
A. Shatskih
Sonnet
Be secret, heart; and if your dreams have come To nothingness, and if their weight was sweet Within you then be silent in defeat, Counting your lost imaginings as the sum Of destined joy. Lest men should call you dumb Sing still the songs that hold within their beat The hopes of every man, and the wild, sweet Predictions of what earth shall yet become. Be secret, heart. The words that you would tell Of your own longing, and your keen distress Hold them to silence; kill, destroy, suppress That melody, although you love it well. And sing the songs that men have always sung Of love and sorrow, since the world was young. --Anna Virginia Mitchell