HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO CREATOR!!!💖
🎩: "Happy birthday bestie!"
☯️: "Happy birthday buddy..."
🌙: "Happy birthday...uhm... whoever you are.."
☀️: "Happy birthday, birthday guy!"
🖤🤍: "Happy birthday..."
🌹: "Happy birthday, my dear~"
seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from Vietnam
seen from Australia

seen from Italy
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Maldives
seen from Vietnam
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Canada
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO CREATOR!!!💖
🎩: "Happy birthday bestie!"
☯️: "Happy birthday buddy..."
🌙: "Happy birthday...uhm... whoever you are.."
☀️: "Happy birthday, birthday guy!"
🖤🤍: "Happy birthday..."
🌹: "Happy birthday, my dear~"
hello i Miss u
im gonna cry g, i miss u more sorry im so absent lately :((
Решил поскетчить непопулярных персонажей
I decided to sketch unpopular characters
Лс: @fedor_ai Парная Ава с: @meowmeowmeow_cats (я ей скоро еблище разхуярю если будет менять постоянно) Проголосовать за канал: https://t.m
so im trying to learn more about the lyly gene/trait and am having a LOT of trouble finding resources that talk about what exactly it is and how it's inherited! can you shed light on this at a lil bit?
Okay so, you're having a hard time because it's ...very subtle on its own! And does weird things with other genes!
I believe it's incomplete dominant, there's talk of a super form. A lyly can make more lylys in the first breeding to a normal.
At its simplest, a lyly can clean up the reds and intensify the blacks. It can also increase the dark blacks and create a chain linking side pattern. The black can also overtake the neck and create a very broken and pixelated appearance. This is typically how I judge hatchlings on if they are lyly or not.
I'm going to put a lot of examples under the cut!
John Lyly’s long-forgotten Galatea – featuring gods, mortals and a highly elastic approach to gender and sex – is being revived at the Brighton festival. We meet the team behind it
Bringing together gods and mortals in a town that refuses a monstrous sacrifice, Galatea is a story of mistaken identity and first love, where gender and sexual attraction are elastic. And this is no straight staging. “My practice has been more rooted in contemporary performance and traditions of queer and trans cabaret,” says Frankland, whose last show I saw had her sharpening knives on the broken wings of an angel at the end of the world. “When Andy and I discussed staging this, we thought, ‘What would it be to approach the play with that community?’”
...
Galatea is a busy, clever play, but its core message is one of acceptance. Towards the end, Venus, the goddess of love, is asked what she makes of the queer lovers in front of her. “I like it well, and allow it,” she declares. As simple as that. “We’re currently dealing with such a hostile environment,” says Frankland, “particularly towards trans people. And here is this play that has this explicit moment of acceptance.”
Lyly
Will a basket of berries help?
plss