This sounds like a dsaf 3 news headline
THE FUCKING DSAF ONE 😭
i bought a mini printer. im having so much fun with it
stupid
I'm fucking scared.. why am i finding d*ystars reblogs..
My mom used to wash my hair in the sink when I was little.. id kick and scream.. and I was fucking scared of the hairdryer. HAIRDRYER.
Funny story, I remember once my brother and his girlfriend came over, I was around 6, and THIS time when my mom washed my hair I could hold down my tears. And I wasnt scared of the hairdryer. My brother and his girlfriend walked in and i deadass looked at them, proud as ever, and said SO happy "Look! I'm not crying!"
Sigh. Now im only partly scared of the hairdryer /j im a teenager im mature now...
Relatively..
Mom washed my hair in the sink and it was ridiculous so I drew Jimmy and curly in the same position
sock puppet :D
He’s going to choke of the ibuprofen -Eddie🐶
Tech-savvy
NO BC GANG WHY DO I AGREE-
I decided to compile as many different Chuuyas as possible to track his eye color across mediums/artists and time. Because it varies a lot.
Note: Chuuya is always on the left, with other characters (mostly Dazai) who were in the same illustration on the right for color comparison, since sometimes artistic choices make it hard to pinpoint it just from looking/color picking. First batch is Harukawa-only, then comes other adaptations, and two bonus collaborations.
Harukawa tends to draw him with brown eyes of varying tint and dimness, so the pre-anime collab used brown for his eyes. Wan! also began in 2015, pre-anime, and the colors initially follow the manga's more. Once the anime settled in, all adaptations and collabs turned to it as the gold standard, and Chuuya's eyes become blue everywhere but the main manga and novels, even in wan! more recently. Hoshikawa follows this trend too, except sometimes for the ~artistry~
*I tried to stick to illustrations where his eye colour was visible, so I skipped all monochrome illustrations, wan! coloured pages where his eyes were solid black, and coloured illustrations where his eyes were too small to get the colour. I also excluded the stage plays because all the actors keep their natural eye colours.