Have I mentioned how much I like your shark trolls (Bruuno, Leo and the others) yet?
THANK U???!! CRIES
here are some other shark trolls! + bonus landdweller shark! The Monarks are the most obvious but i LOVE sharks so i got lots of em!!!!

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Greece
seen from China
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Indonesia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from T1
seen from South Korea
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Netherlands
seen from Canada

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
Have I mentioned how much I like your shark trolls (Bruuno, Leo and the others) yet?
THANK U???!! CRIES
here are some other shark trolls! + bonus landdweller shark! The Monarks are the most obvious but i LOVE sharks so i got lots of em!!!!
Plutus’ novels:
I suddenly became a princess one day
Beware of those oppas!
When death separates you from me [discontinued]
Beware of that goddess! [discontinued]
The first, second and fourth covers were illustrated by Spoon. Spoon also illustrated other art for BOTB.
Edit 1: Plutus has an inactive Naver blog and an old Twitter account that has been deactivated (@ghkdlxm1212)
Edit 2: Spoon herself shared Plutus’ twitter years ago lol
Spoon says she was so happy Plutus’ had made a Twitter account so that she could know what Plutus was up to, but at the moment she wrote her post, Plutus’ account was only 8 hours old and Spoon was the only person following them, so Spoon felt shy
SICK OF
When they both actually die at the end which is exactly what the title said would happen.
Demeter and Hades, the soil, and Wealth
As Home and Hesiod tell us, Iasion, (or Iasios), was a Cretan young farmer loved by Demeter. She laid with him in a thrice plowed fallow field and from him she bore Plutos ("Wealth"), the personification of affluence.
For the ancient Greeks, wealth was closely connected to the soil, either from the crops or the metals and precious stones. God Plutos (Πλούτος) should not be confused with Pluton (Πλούτων), the Lord of the Underworld. The ancients didn't dare speak Hades' name so they called him "The Wealthy One". But we can clearly see from the names of the deities the connection to minerals (for Hades) and the fertile earth, as Plutos was Demeter's son.
On this ancient ερυθρόμορφη πελίκη we see Hades on the left and Demeter on the side, observing him pouring wealth (precious minerals in that case) from the Horn of Abundance.
On the other hand, Plutos, as we see in Aristophanes’ Plutos, is blind. For that reason, he grants wealth to people that may be not deserving of it.
If you liked this post consider buying me a coffee tiropita, cause this is Greece and this baked good keeps me sane 👀
I just finished the book "they both die at the end" I'm definitely bad.
This is a quirky little restaurant in my city that will be torn down to make way for more apartments 🙃 a lot of people are pretty unhappy about it.
This photo belongs to me - I took and edited it! 💜🌙
CREDIT ME if you repost please.