Red PEI sand.
Red PEI sand.
Happy book dragon :)
I probably don't put the message of my blog often enough under my pictures - at least the pictures where I'm wearing lingerie. I want people to see lingerie for what it is - a wonderful tool for accentuating your form - whatever gender you might be.
I know my blog has an appeal to a whole spectrum of people so I don't really want people to feel that this message is targeted at any specific type of person - even though I myself am about as run of a mill, stereotypical male as you can get.
Having some sort of online presence as a creator always leaves me slightly unsure about how much of myself to present to the audience for this very reason. I know it's natural for followers to come to feel like they know the person posting, but on the other side of that, as I touch upon in my pinned post, I find it important for the art itself that people can project a little bit - whether they see themselves, or a close friend or partner, or even their favourite character from a fictional series they enjoy in my images. In a way, it's a way of separating the art from the artist. And I really don't mind when people what to see any gender they want in my images.
But please do remember that it's the art and not the artist. Quite often even I don't see myself in my images - at least when I compare it to the person I see in the mirror every day. It's like when you see an actor in a film - even if they put a lot of themselves into that role, it's still not them that you are seeing!
Undecimber by Sally Kindberg (2023, oil in canvas)
fanfic writers and fan artists are carrying fandoms. they are the backbone of fandoms.
thank you fanfic writers and fan artists


and we can't forget video editors (amvs and such) - my fandom experience is not the same without some banger edits that i replay constantly throughout my hyperfixation
Fun surprises in your Discworld calendar: 6th July, Patrician’s Day
Reblogging myself because it’s today
Happy whatever the fuck this is, Havelock, you scary old bastard 🖤
Ah, Patrician’s Day. The children wave their paper flamingos on a stick, and Dibbler sells slices of dry bread, and the whole family can attend the execution of a mime at 12.
"adults should never be friends with children" im going to put you into a Box and shake you. Are we stupid.
the only reason i have never been groomed online is because when i was 10 i befriended 17 year olds who taught me how to interact with older people online safely.
yall have got to stop being scared of children online and start actually teaching them the ropes. because if you are not up there with them then they're going to be completely alone with the creeps and have 0 metric for what is and is not an appropriate relationship. this also applies offline.
I don't know whether or not this is true, but I'm reblogging this because we live in a world where the third search result when I tried researching the validity of this information was a link to an article about a weight loss product.
The second search result had included the slur "ob*se" in the title of the article.
There are seriously people who tell me fat people aren't oppressed. Meanwhile, trying to find information about how to keep a fat person from drying in a car crash is met with links to products that make dirty money off of how society views my body.
I immediately gave up trying to research this.
"Seatbelt should be across your hips rather than your stomach for everyone, but i think it's more common for fat people to wear seatbelts over the stomach
Pelvic bones are strong and sturdy, and you're going to be MUCH less likely to injure internal organs and such when you suddenly slam into a nylon belt"
Text and photos by @thejacespace
I wanted to put both of these reblogs in one reblog chain since this is helpful information. Thank you both for giving more information than fatphobic Google did.
Thanks to everyone who worked on verifying this information.