anyways say hi to naoshi. they're my pretty prissy princess, your honour

seen from Germany

seen from United States
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seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Belarus

seen from Germany

seen from Australia
seen from Yemen

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Jordan

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom
anyways say hi to naoshi. they're my pretty prissy princess, your honour
Sometimes I think about the people Tamamori left behind in all the different timelines.
The Madam whose child Tamamori lured into the basement and allowed to die.
The Kawase who ended up with Minakami’s bloody corpse in his basement.
The Kawase who got accused of killing Ikeda, and could be swarmed by the media or the police at any given time.
The Katou who was protected from Kaoru by Kawase, and was last seen crying while holding onto Kawase’s dismembered body.
The Professor who lost his sight and both of his maids, with the maids’ corpses lying around, and their blood splattered all over the place.
In case of Madam, Kawase, and Katou, Tamamori thought he was simply rewinding time, and therefore, nullifying all the events that had taken place.
But with Professor, Tamamori knew he was leaving him behind. How could he just leave him alone in that state, deciding to "save him" in another timeline? He didn’t save his own timeline’s Professor literally at all. He just ran away from him to meet a new Professor so that he could absolve himself of the guilt he felt for failing the previous one.
Survival Cat - Machine Gun, 2014, Naoshi Survival Cat - Mushroom Gun, 2014, Naoshi
Naoshi
Was happy to stumble on and purchase this postcard by Naoshi, titled “My Aquarium.” While looking up the artist, I was surprised to find out how the original was made - using colored sand!
Old drawings of 20 y/o Naoshi/Meiko
Whisk Holder (Naoshi)
The Whisk Holder is a ceramic tea accessory designed for holding a Japanese bamboo whisk.
This authentic Mino ware whisk stand was made in Japan, and is finished with a Tenmoku glaze or a Miruku white glaze. Upon a closer look, the glossy Tenmoku glaze reveals beautiful reddish-brown details.
https://hojicha.co/products/whisk-holder