YEAH~~~~~~~~!!

zappyspiker:

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Every Monday Morning

if anyone here has a line account, add me! i just want to spam inazuma stickers!

((REBLOG IF IT IS OKAY TO COME INTO YOUR INBOX AND SAY THE RANDOMEST SHIT I CAN THINK OF BECAUSE I REALLY WANT TO INTERACT WITH YOU))

i haven’t been doing much since i’ve moved back home. i haven’t moved into my room yet since it’s a stinkin mess, so that explains the no sketches recently. let’s hope i can get a job for the summer woot

ishido-shuuji:

wondercrow:

I’ve had a conversation about early concepts with someone on Twitter a while ago, so I’m just gonna leave it here too.

I think they chose the right hairstyle in the end….
…..if some of Gouenji’s original art looked like Tsurugi then the middle left of Aki’s is definitely where Kirino came from!!

ishido-shuuji:

wondercrow:

I’ve had a conversation about early concepts with someone on Twitter a while ago, so I’m just gonna leave it here too.

I think they chose the right hairstyle in the end….

…..if some of Gouenji’s original art looked like Tsurugi then the middle left of Aki’s is definitely where Kirino came from!!

shinji-scream:

messianorder:

Illustrations by Shigenori Soejima on the Persona 3 FES Artbook.

why does yukari have a mullet

graystripe:

graystripe:

my brother just tried to twerk but he farted by accident and now hes crying 

he said hes “disgraced the whole family”

sciencesoup:

Manga Farms

Manga publishing is a huge business, valued at hundreds of millions of dollars worldwide, but what happens when the books are no longer wanted? They’re sent to secondhand bookstores, passed down under they’re tattered and worn, recycled and turned to pulp… But Koshi Kawachi, a Tokyo-based artist whose works often feature water and recycling themes, has come up with a fun and eclectic way to give the old comics a burst of new life. His concept is quite simple: place an old comic upright in a dish in a sunny, airy spot, sprinkle some seeds over it, water them, and wait for sprouts to peek out from between the printed pages. Radishes, buckwheat, broccoli, rocket, basil, and many others will work—and of course, so would any book or comic. You might balk at the idea of sacrificing of a perfectly good book—but you can always use a hated one, perhaps one with a particularly weak storyline that you can (literally) breathe some fresh life into it. Paper is potentially a good fertiliser, and if the nitrogen content of pulp could be boosted and the ink made more environmentally-friendly, then Kawachi’s idea could open up imaginative possibilities for book recycling and indoor farming.