#addison kowalski
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So here's the thing
Im torn.
I could make Ignacy's new partner a man and I think I'm gonna call him Noah Griffin-Kowalski if I do so
Or I could make his partner a woman and name her Evelynn Griffin
OR, a nonbinary partner Addison Griffin
What do I do xD
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LJ's Blog
Welcome, one and all. I have finally figured out how to compile everything into one area so, if there is any one era you’re into, I have everything listed below. Of course, I haven’t begun writing for all of them, but they will fill up soon enough because this is an awesome community.
I would blog for all the fandoms I enjoy but, considering I have more background compiled for the wizarding world of Harry Potter, I think that’s all I will do for the time being. Of course, the only snag is that I aim to finish the Melody Riddle autobiographies first in order for everything in the next generation era to make sense when I work on that.
Without further ado… let’s get this show on the road!
Books:
Melody Riddle Autobiographies — my first and main baby I’ve been writing since the year 2012, this series chronicles the daughter of Lord Voldemort during her time at Hogwarts as she navigates the fine line between good and evil on the path of building a close relationship with both her father and his greatest enemy.
Jessamyn McPhee Series — set in the realm of Hogwarts Mystery, Jessamyn embarks on a journey to break the curse of the Cursed Vaults at Hogwarts in the process of searching for her missing older brother.
Characters + Short Stories:
Founders Era:
Emmanuel
Hogwarts Legacy Era:
Abigail Grandshaw
Marauders / First Wizarding War / Pre-Hogwarts Mystery Era:
Orele Ollivander
— Bonsai
— Amortentia
— Memorable Mother's Day
— Riddle Me This
Gerald Ollivander
Hanalee Kowalski
Jessamyn Kowalski
Jacob McPhee
Hogwarts Mystery Era:
Jessamyn McPhee
Ash Z
— Honourable McGonagall
Ford Billingsley
Cassandra Santacruz
Seraphina Selwyn
Golden Trio Era:
Melody Riddle
Rebecca Figsund
Addison Gentz
Elisabeth Parker
Beatrix Figsund
Magic Awakened Era:
Victoria Durazno
Christian Gentz-Williams
The Calamity Era:
Mugsy
Next Generation Era:
COMING EVENTUALLY
#original character#orele ollivander#melody riddle#jessamyn mcphee#ollivander#ollivander's daughter#ollivander's granddaughter#voldemort's daughter#hogwarts legacy#hogwarts mystery#harry potter#harry potter fandom#my characters#character profile#hphm jacobs sibling
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🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰🎰
randomly generated dynamics // accepting // @tomorrcwsnews
okay that’s a lot but because I love you, I’ll give you ten
1. Elmer Kasprzak and Veronica Lodge
Okay honestly, this is kind of adorable. Veronica isn’t totally uptight but she definitely could afford to loosen up, especially when she already doesn’t think she fits in with the newsies. And Elmer is just so effortlessly fun to be around, I think they have fun potential.
2. Isacc “Ike” Hernandez and Betty Cooper
On this episode of “Betty will love all of all of your muses with speech impediments” apparently. Anyway, Ike is baby, Betty is baby, this could be cute.
3. Addison “Matches” Wick and Delilah Tremaine
Oh man. Ooooooooh man. This just spells trouble. They’re both so catty and while Sarah is sunshine even when she tells Matches to cut her shit out, Delilah hides her soft very, very well. They’d probably have a fight and it’d be amazing.
4. Henri “Henry” Deschamps and Ginny Weasley
I mean, Ginny only has a suuuuuuuper rough outline of a n.ewsies verse that I’ve worked out with Dove but she’s baby and I love her and I need to love Henry more so, why not?
5. Billy Elliot and Gianni Capulet
Listen. Give Gianni a little brother figure. I have no idea how it’d work but Gianni can soften up for kids and I love me some familial dynamics. And Billy deserves all the threads tbh.
6. Jacob Davenport and Gianfranco “Frankie’ Kowalski
We love brothers of other muses getting together, lmao. Nah but for real, Jacob is? The softest? And idk how we haven’t done much with him? And I need to flesh out Frankie more so this could be fun!
7. Gustavo “Starkey” Reyes and Juliet Capulet
Okay, can we just talk about the irony of the reincarnated Shakespeare character getting matched with the guy who works at the theater? That’s so funny. Anyway, Juliet is snarky and really jaded with romance and is far more comfortable with women and colder with men. So it’s just gonna be these two snarking at each other and maybe, slowly, being friends? Maybe more? Who knows! But snarky ships are fun.
8. Darcy Reid and Albert Dasilva
Ooooooooh, Donnie woke up long enough to be jealous in the back of my head, so that’s fun. But yeah no, Darcy deserves a boyfriend but Albert “commitment issues, internalized homophobe” Dasilva is such a bad pair for him. But hey, maybe Darcy can help him address his trauma! They have potential!
9. Racetrack Higgins and Cordelia Faye
Okay so I don’t have a newsies verse for them yet but Cordelia is so bubbly? And precious? And I so rarely get to write them. They’re so impulsive and excitable, I’m sure Race could get them in lots of trouble. A fun, chaotic duo.
10. Benjamin “Buttons” Davenport and Alexei Sudayev
Oh Mak, this is so soft. Alexei’s not super fleshed out, despite how long I’ve had him. But he’s a soft, quiet artist boy who’s most likely aro-ace spec and mostly gay so let him draw Buttons like one of his French girls. It’s 2 am, I’m sorry, but they could be v cute.
#messages#tomorrcwsnews#i'll stop wearing black when they make a darker color (ooc)#((i love basically all of these? so yeah let's plot my guy))
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For the week of 18 February 2019
Quick Bits:
Aquaman #45 gives us a new creation story with Father Sea and Mother Salt. It’s interesting world-building for what’s going on on this island. Robson Rocha, Daniel Henriques, and Sunny Gho seem to level up on their art again. This book is gorgeous.
| Published by DC Comics

Avengers #15 continues the vampire civil war, with the Shadow Colonel basically kidnapping Ghost Rider. Jason Aaron is definitely taking this series in weird places, but it remains highly entertaining. Especially with collaborators like David Marquez and Erick Arciniega who deliver some incredible artwork.
| Published by Marvel

Avengers: No Road Home #2 reveals how Nyx and her family took Olympus. There’s also a neat parallel narration for Hawkeye explaining how the guy with just a bow and arrows can take on gods and monsters. The art from Paco Medina, Juan Vlasco, and Jesus Aburtov is gorgeous, they really seem to pushing themselves with their storytelling. It’s just a shame that none of the artists are credited on the cover.
| Published by Marvel

Barbarella/Dejah Thoris #2 is ridiculously impressive. Leah Williams, Germán García, Addison Duke, and Crank! are delivering an intelligent, humorous, and compelling adventure tale here that reminds me a lot of some of what Alan Moore and Chris Sprouse did in Tom Strong. It’s incredibly inventive and the artwork is amazing. Highly recommended.
| Published by Dynamite

Batman #65 gives us the penultimate chapter of “The Price”, featuring an all out battle between Flash, Gotham Girl, and Gotham. The artwork from Guillem March and Tomeu Morey is stunning, with some incredible layouts as the action continues.
| Published by DC Comics

Black Widow #2 is fairly bloody and violent as Natasha racks up a body count tracking down the people running “No Restraints Play”, a site that specializes in depravity. Flaviano’s line art seems scratchier than the first issue, but it works for the violent tone of story.
| Published by Marvel

Bloodborne #9 begins the third arc, “A Song of Crows”, as Aleš Kot, Piotr Kowalski, Brad Simpson, Aditya Bidikar, and Jim Campbell spotlight Eileen the Crow. This is a bit of return to the kind of abstract storytelling and embrace of oblique existentialism of the first arc as Eileen investigates the ritual murder of a hunter, but is confounded by time and holes in the narrative.
| Published by Titan

Catwoman #8 is ostensibly the “conclusion” to “Something Smells Fishy”, but it doesn’t actually end the story in any way and leaves the reader at a cliffhanger of continuing elements. That being said, it’s still an entertaining issue from Joëlle Jones, Elena Casagrande, Fernando Blanco, John Kalisz, and Josh Reed. Wonderful action sequences, and more questions as to the nature of a reliquary that seems to contain resurrective powers.
| Published by DC Comics

Delver #1 begins a new Comixology Original series from MK Reed, C. Spike Trotman, Clive Hawken, Maarta Laiho, and Ed Dukeshire. It’s a very intriguing and unique take on the fantasy gaming theme of a dungeon full of treasure and monsters with delvers working to plumb the depths. But it’s from the perspective of the townsfolk whose land the door to the dungeon appears in and how it changes and impacts their lives.
| Published by Iron Circus Comics

Doctor Strange #11 concludes the battle with Dormammu and the Faltine, for now at least, from Mark Waid, Jesús Saiz, Javier Pina, Rachelle Rosenberg, and Cory Petit. Some very nice art as usual from Saiz, Pina, and Rosenberg.
| Published by Marvel

Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man #3 continues “Mother of Exiles” from Tom Taylor, Juann Cabal, Nolan Woodard, and Travis Lanham as Peter finds out a bit about the rumours regarding his neighbour and Under York, another duplicate New York City under New York City, that oddly isn’t the Monster Metropolis. Great humour from Taylor in the dialogue.
| Published by Marvel

Guardians of the Galaxy #2 takes a somewhat different approach as Peter Quill drunk dials Kitty as he tries to make sense of what’s going on with Thanos, Gamora, everyone who’s dead, and the current state of the Guardians. Donny Cates, Geoff Shaw, Marte Gracia, and Cory Petit are really taking this series into interesting offbeat territory, while still delivering some excellent humour and an ominous feel to Starfox’s new band of “guardians”.
| Published by Marvel

Incursion #1 begins a new mini picking up on where the Eternal Warrior and Geomancer are since Harbinger Wars 2 and Ninja-K, and pit them against Imperatrix Virago, a cosmic villain that is devouring worlds (kind of like if Galactus were pestilence), from Andy Diggle, Alex Paknadel, Doug Braithwaite, José Villarrubia, Diego Rodriguez, and Marshall Dillon. The art is incredible, the stakes seem pretty high, and the outlook after this first issue look pretty grim for Earth.
| Published by Valiant

James Bond 007 #4 sees Stephen Mooney join Greg Pak, Tríona Farrell, and Ariana Maher for the art chores for three issues, continuing the tale of Bond and “Oddjob”’s team-up. Like Marc Laming, Mooney seems to be born to draw Bond and espionage themed stories.
| Published by Dynamite

Judge Dredd: Toxic #4 concludes what has been an excellent series dealing with xenophobia and hateful rhetoric from Paul Jenkins, Marco Castiello, Vincenzo Acunzo, Jason Millet, Shawn Lee, and Robbie Robbins. I’ve always found non 2000 AD Judge Dredd stories to be a bit of crapshoot, but IDW have been delivering well with the past two mini-series, this and Under Siege.
| Published by IDW

Justice League #18 is the latest excursion into the Legion of Doom territory from James Tynion IV, Pasqual Ferry, Hi-Fi, and Tom Napolitano. It works with some of the revelations from last issue regarding Martian Manhunter and builds a new narrative for Lionel Luthor’s past and his work with Vandal Savage. It’s interesting to see Tynion working with variations on discarded continuities in this way, building a new past that synthesizes pre-Flashpoint ideas with the current batch of backstories.
| Published by DC Comics

Middlewest #4 only seems to be getting better and better as more of this world and how it seems to work get fleshed out by Skottie Young, Jorge Corona, Jean-Francois Beaulieu, and Nate Piekos. There’s something incredibly magical and special about this series that taps into the feeling of some of the best coming-of-age fantasies as it blends Ray Bradbury, JM Barrie, and Carlo Collodi into this magical realist adventure.
| Published by Image

Miles Morales: Spider-Man #3 concludes the opening arc from Saladin Ahmed, Javier Garrón, David Curiel, and Cory Petit by adding Captain America to Miles & Rhino’s team-up. This has been a very entertaining start to the series, with a nice mix of Miles’ personal life and superheroics.
| Published by Marvel

Naomi #2 reasserts that Jamal Campbell is a powerhouse of an artist and one of the best kept secrets of the past few years who really should have a higher profile. His art is amazing. It also helps that the story he, Brian Michael Bendis, David F. Walker, and Carlos M. Mangual are telling is as compelling as this, as Naomi confronts Dee as she tries to learn about the day of her adoption. It’s very widescreen and epic as it hints at the broader DC Universe, but at the same time this is very deeply personal.
| Published by DC Comics

Old Man Quill #2 gives the Guardians a taste of the depravity and despair that Earth has fallen to in this post-superhero world. Ethan Sacks shows there’s still a bit of humour left, though, in that Piledriver’s descendent thinks that Piledriver was one of the all-time greats. Also the art from Robert Gill and Andres Mossa gives a wonderful amount of detail to the wastelands.
| Published by Marvel

Relay #4 returns after a delay with new artist Dalibor Talajić (I believe Andy Clarke had to bow out due to illness, but I’m not 100% sure on that). Talajić’s art style is not as bright and clean as Clarke’s, giving a darker, shadowy approach that results in the bleak, horror elements of the story coming further into focus.
| Published by AfterShock

Seven to Eternity #13 returns from its own lengthy delay to conclude the arc in Skod, with the revelation of part of Adam’s choice to save the Mud King. It reiterates the theme since the beginning that there seem to be no good choices in this world, that everything tainted, despite Adam’s father believing the world black and white. While we are going into another trade break, Rick Remender, Jerome Opeña, Matt Hollingsworth, and Rus Wooton consistently make this worth the wait.
| Published by Image / Giant Generator

Sharkey: The Bounty Hunter #1 is the latest of Mark Millar’s Netflix feeder series, after The Magic Order and Prodigy, with Simone Bianchi and Peter Doherty rounding out the team. This one feels a bit like if Warren Ellis were writing Strontium Dog, and it works. The artwork from Bianchi is worth it on its own. Gorgeous character designs.
| Published by Image

Venom #11 is another holy crap issue from Donny Cates, Ryan Stegman, Joshua Cassara, JP Mayer, Frank Martin, and Clayton Cowles. There are some really big revelations about Eddie and his family that really need to be read firsthand. Amazing work.
| Published by Marvel

X-O Manowar #24 reminds us again just how good of an artist and storyteller Tomás Giorello is. The action sequences and battle between Aric and Hesnid is incredible, with fairly inventive layouts that just elevate the overall impact of the pages. Giorello and Diego Rodriguez really make this something joyous to behold.
| Published by Valiant

Other Highlights: American Carnage #4, Bitter Root #4, Black Badge #7, The Black Order #4, Breakneck #3, Coda #9, Death Orb #5, DuckTales #18, East of West #41, Evolution #14, Exorsisters #5, Go Bots #4, Grumble #4, High Level #1, Hot Lunch Special #5, Jessica Jones: Purple Daughter #2, Jim Henson’s Beneath the Dark Crystal #5, Jim Henson’s Labyrinth: Discovery Adventure, Jughead: The Hunger #12, Lightstep #4, The Lone Ranger #5, Lucifer #5, Lumberjanes #59, Mars Attacks #5, Monstress #20, Outpost Zero #7, Rainbow Brite #4, Shuri #5, Solo: A Star Wars Story #5, Star Wars Adventures #18, Starcraft: Soldiers #2, Stronghold #1, Sukeban Turbo #4, Superb #17, TMNT: Urban Legends #10, Teen Titans #27, Turok #2, The Unstoppable Wasp #5, The Witcher: Of Flesh and Flame #3
Recommended Collections: Amazing Spider-Man - Volume 2: Friends & Foes, Bedtime Games, The Beauty - Volume 5, Black Lightning: Brick City Blues, Captain America - Volume 1: Winter in America, Days of Hate - Volume 2, High Crimes, Infinity 8 - Volume 3: The Gospel According to Emma, Old Man Hawkeye - Volume 2: The Whole World Blind, The Punisher - Volume 1: World War Frank, West Coast Avengers - Volume 1: Best Coast

d. emerson eddy would do anything for a Klondike bar, but he won’t do that.
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vimeo
[ Box Set | Full Movie 2018 ]
Directed and Edited by - Alex Havey
Filmed by - Alex Havey, Seth Leinbach, Zach Lastrilla, Calen Albert, Owen Dahlberg, Ben Albert, Jack Harris, Tye Kowalski, Brad Cisewski, Patrick Ring, Mikey Perkins, Heidi Esser, Sam Klein, Garrett Mackenzie, and Erik Karl
Riders - Sam Anderson, Sam Klein, Paul Marik, Seth Leinbach, Chris Johnson, Ethan Swadburg, Andreya Zvonar, Corey Jackson, Tucker Addison, Sam Gnoza, Owen Dahlberg, Seth Shuster, Adam Homi, Adam Rottschafer, Tye Kowalski, Patrick Ring, Blake Lamb, Drew Patton, Ryan Rasmussen, Tristin Highner, Danny Sokol, Ben Monson, Alec Nelson, Louie Arrigoni, and Conner Ross
Songs - "Coma (1984)" cEvin Key "Contact" by Froth "O.R.B." by ORB "Take My Time" by Skinshape "Atlantic Postcard" by The Holydrug Couple "The Otha Side" by Terror Reid "I Hope You Weren't Waiting Long" by Richard In Your Mind "All I Can Do" by Richard In Your Mind "Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)" by Irma Thomas "Hurry and Enjoy" by Skinshape "Celia" by Cults "Old Faithful" by Spasibo Records
Thank you - Josh Faber, Jared Hochmuth, Collin Switzky, Matt Miley, Andrew Amacher, Oliver Larson, Nathan McGree, Tyrol Basin, Windells, Tye Kowalski & Family, Zach Peper & Family, Everett Lund, Seth Shuster, Jon Fox, NorthPull Winches, Seth Leinbach, Zach Lastrilla, Timberline Staff, Mama Hood, Erik Anderson, Owen Dahlberg, Christian Raguse, Conner Ross & Family, Alex Stoick, Devils Head, Calen Albert, Ben Albert, Ryan Ruffing, Jack Harris, Simon Berghoef, Marquette Hospital, Wynn Berns, random family in MN who let us ride the rail in their backyard, Patrick Ring, Chris Johnson, Diane Highsmith, Dan Brown, Andrew Von Haden, Tristin Highner, Chris Havey, Hunter Higgins, Cooper Hoffmeister, and everyone else that helped make this happen!
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Eightbit.me
Amplify’d from www.crunchbase.com
Eightbit.me will be a service to help people create 8-bit avatars. The first idea was to use images with very few selections and to use pure HTML / JS to create the characters.
Inspired by an 8-bitted Dribbble post by UK artist and designer Harry Harrison, San Francisco interactive designers Addison Kowalski, Amadeus Demarzi and Courtney Guertin took the idea to the next level by 8 bit-ing their Twitter avatars, which inevitably went viral among the tech set. Eightbit.me is the result.
Read more at www.crunchbase.com
See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/bugcv
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youtube
Tutorial on how to create an EightBit 5 o’clock Shadow using an application called Photoshop.
by Addison Kowalski
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