Something Else. Also Terrible.

kithnkin:

cheriiiiiiiiiiiiiii:

imagekithnkin replied to your post: oh yes and an extra special thank you to kith for…

I AM GLAD TO BE A SUCCESSFUL MAMA DUCK

you saved me

except from that chair.

PUP INSISTED SHE DIDN’T

also I have meerkats for you

omg iluuuu ;_;

kithnkin replied to your post: oh yes and an extra special thank you to kith for…

I AM GLAD TO BE A SUCCESSFUL MAMA DUCK

you saved me

except from that chair.

oh yes and an extra special thank you to kith for giving me that immune system boost vitamin c drink mix mid-con because I can’t tell you how scared I was of getting the con funk.

two days later and I’m not sick so i’ll just give you the credit for that.

stormssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

It Made Sense at the Time
Jeff Eddy: Quite a lot of it is sorta... weird. What's up with that?
Ursula Vernon: Did I mention those drugs in college?
Ursula Vernon: Well, I like to bring that up as the explanation, but I've never actually painted anything directly tied into anything I saw when I was leaving flaming bags of poo on the doorsteps of perception, and in fact, the work I was doing then was largely humdrum fantasy women-in-steel-bikini work, whereas now that my spinal fluid is as pure as the driven snow - I don't even drink - I routinely come up with the sorta weird. So that's probably not a good reason, even if it does make a good excuse.
Ursula Vernon: If I were going to try to nail it down, I think it's feedback. Occasionally, I'd get a weird idea, say - I assume we all do - and usually I'd dismiss it. But very occasionally, I'd paint it. And thanks to the internet, which has been an astounding gift to artists in terms of feedback, I'd get a lot of positive feedback on the weird stuff, and that would encourage me, and maybe the next time I had a weird idea, I wouldn't dismiss it, and I'd get more positive feedback, and eventually I'd be actively going for weird ideas. And once you start exercising it, the imagination is a muscle like anything else. So I think that being encouraged to be weird has made me weirder, and the weirder you are, the weirder you get.

According to costume designer Lindy Hemming, she took two years to design Bane’s coat; it was inspired by a Swedish army jacket and a French Revolution frock coat, to make Bane look equally dictatorial and revolutionary, “like an amalgam of all sorts of bits and pieces he cobbled together as he passed through some very remote places.”

nomnomnom

A Sea of Writings

nnoiz:

アネモネBy:Chernotrav

Mushi Shi
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