hey don't cry, ‘large’ creature with 20 arms found lurking in Antarctic sea, okay??
i need you all to see how magnificent this thing is
@maedhros-nelyafinwe / maedhros-nelyafinwe.tumblr.com
hey don't cry, ‘large’ creature with 20 arms found lurking in Antarctic sea, okay??
i need you all to see how magnificent this thing is
She wakes up at 2 PM. She eats a McChicken out of the garbage. She’s a goddess.
I’ve been seeing a lot of anti-Nazi ones, which is great, but I felt like we needed one to show our support for the Jewish community.
all you goyim I follow - I see you reblogging this and it warms me.
Great Mouse Detective version of Dracula happening simultaneously as the events of Dracula, so there’s just five mice in Victorian clothes unnoticed by the human cast desperately trying to kill a bat.
Or they’re also trying to kill Dracula, but exclusively during the parts of the book when he’s turned into a bat.
Dracula invited a human realtor and a mouse realtor to his castle and there were extended periods of time where he would say to his human realtor “Ah please excuse me I have business to attend to” and turn into a bat to talk to his mouse realtor.
Starting Road Of Bones today!
Starting Episode Thirteen today! I've been excited for this one
Nona the Ninth
Started The Luminous Dead last night and it's promising so far
A time of resurrection and awakening, a time when a period of our life comes to an absolute end making way for dynamic new beginnings.
TMNT Mutant Mayhem | Teaser Trailer
My commissions are currently open, and all 5 slots are empty! Hit me up if you’re interested. I’m still paying off some hospital bills, so I can always use the work.
Starting a new book soon!
#Happy Superbowl superb owl
Started Hummingbird Salamander last night
Starting my next book tonight, The Word Hord
I commissioned @chaoticallywickedart on Instagram to draw Weland the Smith for me. Despite doing some terrible things, I felt a connection to the god and have grown attached to him. This is how he appears in my mind.
The setting is in the winter because in Anglo-Saxon literature, winter was often used as an analogy for depression. When people were at their worst, when they were sad, or lost, scenes of winter were often described. I wanted that idea and theme to carry here. Weland was permanently disabled and held captive. He was in a dark place.
But when he gains his wings (the manner he does so varies from the sources. Since he's a smith, I like the idea that he built them), he finds hope in escape. In here, he's just finished his wings and he's looking up to the sky, ready to reclaim his freedom and leave this part of his life behind.
The detailed designs are influenced and taken from existing Anglo-Saxon historical art.