#fan button
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atelierfarms · 5 months ago
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Do you know those fan buttons on sites like DA? I decided to make a base for those who want to make their own!
Sadly I don't know the font but if anyone knows it please let me know! ^^
Feel free to use it with or without credit!
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sweet-dottie-dan-dan · 2 years ago
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Fan Buttons i made by Myself, here's the Elliott From Earth fan buttons
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minjimunji · 10 months ago
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bi 4 bi percabeth,,,,, 👉👈
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ghostdeals · 2 days ago
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No bcus the implications of the Saja Boys are so funny like??? Jinu is the only one we've seen has a confirmed music background so did he have to research, train, style, and manage the group by himself???? Did he also have to come up with the concepts and the marketing or is there like a demon thats rlly good at photoshop? Or if its all Jinu that means he had to teach himself fucking adobe after effects and how to use tiktok. Also how did he even research how to make a boy group was he in the trenches of BTS comment sections??? God the more I think about the Saja Boys the funnier it gets
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unhappy-eef · 8 months ago
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Sebastian Solace button pin design⁉
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clarissasbakery · 3 months ago
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more of the coinpinlings â€ïžđŸ§ĄđŸ’›
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maaagpie · 7 months ago
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thinking about emmrich lots lately....
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handledwithgloves · 6 months ago
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auror partners besties đŸ‘Żâ€â™‚ïž
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ncydema-hart · 7 months ago
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cheezitofthevalley · 1 year ago
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ms paint graphics
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xmoonlitxdreamx · 4 months ago
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Finished!! Maid/butler-y Overwatch button set. :>
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sweet-dottie-dan-dan · 2 years ago
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3 fan buttons from Elliott From Earth i made!
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vroom-vroom1 · 5 months ago
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He’s simultaneously one of Seb’s biggest haters and president of his fan club.
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fannedandflawless · 2 months ago
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The Uniform Was Armour
An attire analysis of Severus Snape, as portrayed by Alan Rickman
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What does it mean to wear forty buttons every day? To choose black not for fashion, but for function? To wrap yourself in discipline and precision while others wear colour and comfort?
I’ve been studying Severus Snape’s wardrobe across every film—and what began as curiosity quickly turned into full analytical obsession. Because beneath that iconic silhouette is an entire philosophy stitched in wool, linen, and silence.
Let’s talk about it.
👔 The Buttons, Layers, and Surprising Realism of Snape’s Wardrobe
Yes, I’ve zoomed in. Repeatedly. Across every film, from Philosopher’s Stone to Deathly Hallows, I’ve counted his buttons—frame by frame, button by button, layer by layer. Let’s just say—I’ve become very familiar with this frock coat’s construction.
And darling, here’s the breakdown:
3 unbuttoned at the collar
9 buttoned down the front
10 per sleeve
4 per leg
🧼 Total: 40 buttons.
Forty. Let that settle in your bones.
On set, most were decorative—Alan Rickman wasn’t fastening all forty by hand. Hidden zippers, snap closures—clever costume design. (This is based on standard film costuming practices—where elaborate garments are often modified for ease of dressing with hidden closures. No official quote confirms this for Snape's outfit specifically, but it aligns with how similar costumes are constructed.) But in-universe? If the real Severus Snape wore this...
It’s safe to assume he used a spell. Realistically, no one’s spending fifteen minutes every morning fastening forty buttons—not even Severus Snape. He had essays to mark, potions to brew, and a corridor presence to maintain.
And oh, that presence.
—
đŸ§„ The Full Layer Breakdown (Based on Alan Rickman’s Film Costume and Button-by-Button Image Zooming)
1. White high-collared shirt – stiff, sharp, and always buttoned to the throat. Clean. Severe. Scholar-coded.
+ Black cravat or neckcloth – visible in several key scenes (notably when inspecting the cursed necklace and seated with the Dark Lord). Likely silk or satin. It adds formality and structure, anchoring the layers while communicating a quiet, old-world elegance.
2. Inner black buttoned layer – possibly a waistcoat or inset panel. Tailored close. Minimal.
3. Frock coat – double-breasted with 14 visible buttons. Structured. Commanding. The real statement piece.
4. Long open-front robe – that iconic swirl. When he enters a room, it follows like a shadow.
5. Straight black trousers – clean-cut, no nonsense.
6. Tall black boots – polished leather, confident heel.
7. (Possibly) sewn-in underlayer for structure – subtle but significant.
—
đŸȘĄ What Could the Fabrics Be?
Shirt: Cotton or stiff linen—light but architectural. Holds the collar high.
Inner layer/waistcoat: Lightweight wool or twill—close fit, breathable, efficient.
Frock coat: Wool blend or gabardine—thick, silent, unmistakable.
Robe: Wool or silk-blend—fluid with weight, designed for drama.
Trousers: Soft wool or worsted—no embellishments, just utility.
Boots: Black leather—lived-in, lacquered, ready to move.
The entire ensemble whispers: do not underestimate me.
—
đŸ”„ How Did He Survive the Heat?
All black. All layered. All day. In July? (Or August, depending on the school calendar—but we’ll get to that heatstroke later.)
The answer is geography. He lived in the dungeons.
The Slytherin common room sits beneath the Black Lake—stone walls, filtered light, the occasional squid gliding past. Cold enough to preserve potions and secrets alike.
So yes—he wore forty buttons and never broke a sweat. Because the walls were colder than any seasonal breeze. And honestly? So was he.
—
đŸ§Œ How Many Did He Own?
We never see his wardrobe, but let’s be honest—he’d need more than one. You don’t brew over a cauldron daily without carrying the scent of asphodel and burnt fluxweed for hours. Add parchment ink, dust from centuries-old tomes, a hint of candle soot—and you’ve got a potion master’s signature scent.
And let’s not forget: Hermione Granger literally set fire to his robes in Philosopher’s Stone—whether it was the hem or that slightly fluffy bit at his ankle, the damage was real. There can’t have been just one. Not in a school full of reckless students and volatile substances.
These garments weren’t just iconic—they were functional. And surely duplicated.
Three, at minimum. Five, if he allowed himself the luxury. All identical. All immaculate. Possibly with a charm or two to keep the folds crisp and the fabric warded.
—
🧣 The One Exception—His Layer for Weather
Across eight films and countless scenes, Severus Snape’s uniform never truly wavered—except once, perhaps twice.
In Philosopher’s Stone, during the infamous Quidditch match where he counter-cursed Quirrell’s jinx, he wore something different:
A high black scarf
Fingerless black gloves
A heavier, textured outer cloak—draped and more tactical
It’s the only time we see his silhouette altered so clearly.
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Still black, still formal, but slightly more utilitarian. Weather-appropriate, perhaps? November in the high stands of the Quidditch pitch must’ve been brutal—wind cutting, robes whipping. Most students wore house scarves not just for pride, but to survive the chill.
So yes, that scarf and heavier cloak weren’t just stylistic flourishes. They were practical, protective, and quietly prepared.
Either way, it stood apart—and not just in costume. In that moment, he was cast as the villain, misunderstood and brooding in layers.
And I must wonder—where did that cloak go? At first glance, I assumed it had been lost to the flames of Hermione’s accidental sabotage in Philosopher’s Stone. A dramatic end to a singular garment.
But then—rewatching Goblet of Fire—there it was again. During the Hungarian Horntail trial, Snape sits beside McGonagall, and if you look closely: folded cuffs, denser weave, a broader drape over his shoulders. The silhouette is unmistakable.
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The scarf and gloves are gone, but the cloak’s presence speaks volumes. Not flashy, but deliberate. A return not for spectacle, but for utility. Its weight, its shape, the quiet precision in its fit—nearly identical.
So no—it wasn’t destroyed. Not gone. Not forgotten. Simply reserved. Practical. Intentional.
Another glimpse into how even the rare deviations in his attire still follow a purpose. Nothing is ever random with Severus Snape.
Still all black, still stern—but there’s something in the added structure that reads more formal. Less dungeon-brewer, more event overseer. It’s functional, wind-resistant, and dignified in a cold, open-air setting.
Perhaps it was kept for outdoor events—or those requiring a touch more presence. It reminds us that even the most stoic wardrobe had its layers—and that nothing Severus Snape wore was ever without intent.
Even when the silhouette shifted slightly, the reasoning didn’t. Whether reserved for specific events or dictated by weather, every layer had purpose. He was always watching. Always calculating. Always protecting.
—
đŸ–€ What the Uniform Meant: Endurance as Identity
The choice to wear such rigid attire wasn’t just style—it was declaration. It was discipline. It was Severus Snape, sealing himself into something he could control.
"It is endurance. Conditioning. Discipline—of body and mind. This attire is not meant for ease. It is meant for containment."
That’s how I imagine he would have spoken of it, if ever asked. With restraint. With precision. With the same measured control that shaped his every movement.
He didn’t wear black because he liked the colour. He wore it because black absorbs. It doesn’t reflect, doesn’t shine, doesn’t distract. It takes.
And if someone ever questioned the heat? The weight of so many layers?
"If I wear less
 I feel more." "And for someone who has spent most of his life bearing what others cast off, that is
 not always bearable."
It was never about temperature. It was about endurance as aesthetic. About turning vulnerability into fabric. A way of saying: I will bear what others shed.
To wear layers was to keep the world at a distance. To button forty buttons was to remind himself: control is chosen. Every day.
"There is a certain power in being the only one who does not wilt under pressure. Let them sweat. Let them squirm. I remain."
Snape didn’t need robes that breathed. He needed robes that held.
Because the man beneath them had spent a lifetime feeling too much. And hiding it all in plain sight.
And somehow, it worked.
He endured.
And never once did his silhouette flinch.
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ijustwannahavefunn · 7 months ago
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POV: You're in a small fandom with no merch to collect, but then you remember you can make it yourself đŸ€©
These are just for me; I'm not selling them (I don't think I could anyway 😂), but I thought I'd share some pictures with y'all đŸ„°
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clarissasbakery · 11 months ago
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Do u have other II/BFDI ship kids that aren't Fantube?
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yes!! i drew coinpin kids awhile back
 but i haven’t fleshed out designs for them or anything
 maybe i’ll revisit them
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