Things I love, be it art, shows, actors, books, or words... 43,cis female, pansexual. She/her. Living in Florida, dreaming of a life in Colorado.
Have an intense love of Hannibal, Sense8, Doctor Who, MCU and 007 and oh, about a million others.
Bibliophile and proud of it.Dabbler of outdoor photography. Nerdfighter
So usually i love going to work. I do deliveries for a medical marijuana dispensary. It started raining in my part of Florida yesterday around noon. It’s not supposed to stop until Friday evening. There are flood warnings and tornado warnings everywhere.
Will be going in to work today and try to convince my boss it’s not safe for the crew to be on the road. I hope she listens. Otherwise it’s going to be a long and squirrelly day on the road!
ask me about the difference between leopard/cheetah/jaguar print, it’s my field of expertise
What is the difference? Please learn me a thing
cheetahs got dots! little dot dots i want to bop
leopards got filling. it’s cheetah 2.0. Cheetah on meth. look at that leopard shit.
then there’s jaguar. Jaguar is madness. it took leopard print & decided wait. what if–MAW DOTS. it’s just leopard print with dots in the middle, it’s chaos
look at this bullshit
i’m angry just looking at it
so in ascending order: Cheetah < Leopard < Jaguar
C.L.J. someone come up with weird mnemonic for that, i’ve done enough work for you greedy bastards
Ise Ananphada illustrated this detailed artwork for Guillermo del Toro’s Pan’s Labyrinth. Screen prints, limited to 425, were released by Hero Complex Gallery but quickly sold out.
Nagasone Tojiro Mitsumasa, Helmet in the form of a Sea Conch Shell, 1618 (source).
Late sixteenth-century warlords and powerful generals wore flamboyant “extraordinary helmets” (kawari-kabuto) to distinguish themselves amidst uniformly armored footmen and brilliantly attired samurai. This masterpiece of metalwork must have belonged to one of the most important men in Japan at the time of the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu. It was so greatly admired that several derivative copies were made during the 1600s.
The helmet is sculpted like a sea-conch shell with a brim textured like ray-skin. The conch-shell is a symbol of wordly and religious authority. It was sounded by generals to marshal troops. It was also a symbol of Buddha’s voice and the preaching of Buddhist Law.- from the Worcester Art Museum description