wanted to practice some of what i learned in water colors class, but with my own taste. it's really hard to get the sky as blue as i want... also credit to @kchloewhite for help in the art critique server, especially the shape of the rock, which i stole outright from a sketch she did for me 😅 @manasseh also tried to help with anatomy but i ignored them because i'm too lazy 💔😔
The frat that was chanting the “no means yes….” chant is actually the same frat both Bush presidents were in 😭 Yale! And the frat was only banned for six years after that. It’s already back. Many women who went to Yale have horror stories from that frat and two of its members were fucking president
I feel like people really underestimate the impact that your mode of transportation has on how you see and think about and interact with your city. Like, driving makes your city feel like a few islands, pockets of space where you regularly go and new ones you discover only when brought there for a purpose, but all amidst an ocean of just, filler. Taking public transit makes your city feel like a network of corridoors, a glowing grid along which you may discover new things, but whose alternate winding paths you only take when given to by circumstance. Cycling makes your city feel more human in its scale, and while you can only go so far, the spaces through which you travel are far more often built for people, not machines, and that difference is tangible, while your freedom of movement gives you more opportunities for exploration. Walking can only take you so far, but you see everything meant for you along those places, and every street feels like it carries potential, with no barriers to stopping and partaking of whatever piques your interest. I think, among these, driving is the one that by far most isolates you from the place you live, while the others are, in decreasing order, most utilitarian, and in increasing order, most personally connective to your shared space.
a raven father (i call him "pants") I've been feeding sometimes likes to sit outside my window and either wait for more food or just listen to the stuff I'm watching while I draw. Today's a colder day so he likes to fluff up a bit, and I kid you not :
the real problem with necromancy is all of these necromancers are pursuing immortality instead of dying so all the good necromancer names are taken for like centuries at a time. the other day i met a guy who called himself skull james