(Source: seasepulchre)

Reblogged from woundingtooth with 2,531 notes /

and-cetera:

octopickles:

lizawithazed:

rexiv:

Melanism

(the opposite of Albinism)

Gorgeous.

But that snake… holy crap it’s beautiful.

They’re all so gorgeous wowow.

Reblogged from medody with 15,738 notes /

moedea:

shirouu:

i don’t get why girls are concerned about the size of their breasts

  • if they’re small there’s less distance between my heart to theirs
  • if they’re large there’s more to love and hold

plus you can’t really go wrong with breasts of any size ok

words of wisdom

“if they’re small there’s less distance between my heart to theirs”

(——’:

Reblogged from bootybaby1994 with 62 notes /

"Slow pan over a 3D rendered Times Square, cue Kanye West song."

F. Scott Fitzgerald (via likeneelyohara)

(Source: ryanhatesthis)

Reblogged from nabraska with 4,674 notes /

nkym:

「blog絵」/「ともみ」[pixiv]

nkym:

「blog絵」/「ともみ」[pixiv]

Reblogged from caustic0 with 395 notes /

(Source: earth-song)

Reblogged from dinosoresaur with 1,845 notes /

higuchiyuko:

食卓にだしましたところ家族は大喜びでした。

OMU BABy

higuchiyuko:

食卓にだしましたところ家族は大喜びでした。

OMU BABy

Reblogged from terribleclaw with 153 notes /

also got one with shirtless nic cage on one side and shirtless tom hardy on the other

look i finally remembered to scan in a good valentine i got

look i finally remembered to scan in a good valentine i got

2 notes /

thedailywhat:

Weekend Read: Comic book writer and novelist Greg Rucka (Stumptown, Queen and Country) answers a frequently asked question in an incisive essay for io9 entitled “Why I Write ‘Strong Female Characters’”.
The entire piece is well worth a read, but here’s the key passage:

Writers don’t write Men or Women or Dogs or Salmon. Writers write characters, and at our best, if we do it well and with care and with thought, we invest in those characters a spark of life, a realism and nuance that makes them believable and relatable.

Rucka also questions why journalists don’t tend to ask female writers how they write “strong female characters,” and why more male writers don’t do the research about their female characters, the way they would with any other character whose experience differs from their own.
[io9]

thedailywhat:

Weekend Read: Comic book writer and novelist Greg Rucka (StumptownQueen and Country) answers a frequently asked question in an incisive essay for io9 entitled “Why I Write ‘Strong Female Characters’”.

The entire piece is well worth a read, but here’s the key passage:

Writers don’t write Men or Women or Dogs or Salmon. Writers write characters, and at our best, if we do it well and with care and with thought, we invest in those characters a spark of life, a realism and nuance that makes them believable and relatable.

Rucka also questions why journalists don’t tend to ask female writers how they write “strong female characters,” and why more male writers don’t do the research about their female characters, the way they would with any other character whose experience differs from their own.

[io9]

Reblogged from huliia with 586 notes /