Budd Root

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Kosovo

seen from Malaysia
seen from India

seen from Russia
seen from South Korea
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Brazil
seen from Singapore

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Germany

seen from Türkiye
seen from Chile
Budd Root
Today's government mandated femslash couplethrouple of the day is
Gigi, Meriem, and Tina!
we can tell i have not drawn many chibis in my life but its ok be nice to me. awkward chibi paperdolls are my best friend right now. also i love her. so so much. go my daughter.
Meriem by Richard Hescox
Meriem from Caveeoman
by Tim Seeley
Korak, Son of Tarzan (vol. 1) #50 (February, 1973). Cover by Joe Kubert.
This was DC Comics' fifth issue of Korak, Son of Tarzan, after taking over the series - and its numbering - from Gold Key Comics, which no longer had the license for the Edgar Rice Burroughs characters.
This book only showed up sporadically at shops near me, but I always picked it up because it was Tarzan-related. The series was partially based on the second half of Burroughs' novel The Son of Tarzan, wherein Korak's love, Meriem, is abducted and he spends months looking for her. Of course, to spice things up, the comic book had Korak traveling to all sorts of fantastical places that are not in Burroughs' stories.
I admit that, at first, young me thought that Korak was wearing a headband. This was probably an artistic choice to keep him from being confused for his father, Tarzan (as if Korak's brown hair and Tarzan's leopard-skin loincloth weren't enough).
Turns out, it wasn't a headband at all, but a scar. This really confused young me, because in the novel (which was the first one I read, despite being the fourth in the series) Korak has no scar on his head.
Instead, it is Tarzan who has a distinctive scar on his forehead, running from his left eye to his right ear. He received it in battle with Terkoz the great ape, his adoptive brother, and the one Tarzan defeated for leadership of the Mangani tribe. Subsequently, Burroughs described the car as glowing red whenever Tarzan was enraged.
Devon Massey!
CAN I JUST SAY i’ve only known meriem for a few days and i would die for her