They keep thinking they're so cool.
Not sure about this one tbh.
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They keep thinking they're so cool.
Not sure about this one tbh.
『マヌルネコ』
20251202
Figured I'd do my due diligence as im playing through The Final Shape to remind everyone of this bug. Bald crow isnt real cannot hurt me.
1956, photographer Ralph Crane captured this striking multi-exposure image of stunt performer and trick shooter Rodd Redwing demonstrating an ultra-fast quickdraw known as the "border-shift." Using repeated exposures on a single frame, the photograph shows the motion of Redwing's hand and revolver in rapid sequence, creating the illusion of several guns appearing at once. It was a visual way to freeze a movement too fast for the eye to easily follow.
Redwing was part of a mid-20th century wave of western entertainers who turned frontier gun handling into stage performance, combining speed, precision, and showmanship for crowds and cameras. Images like this became especially popular during the 1950s, when cowboy culture was booming across film, television, and magazines. Rather than documenting an actual gunfight technique, the photo highlights the era's fascination with western skill, spectacle, and photographic experimentation.
Mean girls but the skrunklies
Mmmmmmm hyperfixation go brrrr
Art by the lovely @mstarcreates (the festive Quickdraw piece) and @dredgensimp (drifteris my beloved)
I haven’t gotten around to painting my ghost shell yet—im planning on painting Omen hehe— (just waiting for a free weekend lmfao)
1956, Ralph Crane multi-exposure photo of stuntman Rodd Redwing performing a “ border-shift “ quickdraw .