If this doesn’t go viral, I’ll kms
-👑
my head: *hurts*
me: *confused on why its hurting*
the one cliff bar and diet coke in my stomach:
Josh Brolins thoughts about the Joker
“We have a habit of hating and ostracising and diving and sweeping our problems under the rug. Joker, is simply lifting the rug and looking underneath it”
My legs are weak and I dont know if it’s because of a lack of sleep or lack of sugar
Louis and Lestat, Interview with the Vampire - 1994 Chevalier and Philippe, Versailles - 2015
Rocks
Pebbles
Crystals and gems
Buttons
Marbles
Sticks
Coins
Jewelry
Metal scraps
Plastic things
Acorn
Chestnuts
Any nuts really
Snail shells
Sea shells
Egg shells
Bones
Teeth
Dried flowers and leaves
Seeds
Pins
Patches
Badges
Stickers
Taxidermy
Fire crackers and pop it crackers
Sewing supplies
Art supplies
Cards
Dolls
Plants
Live insects and animals in proper condition (gotta love a big huge enormous jar of worms)
Dirt
Sand
Water from different locations
Moss
Pretty pots
Animal shaped stuff
Plushies
Worms on a string
Furbies
Fuggler
Any weird stuffed animal especially with button eyes
Candies
Matches
Knives
Spoons and forks
Fake flowers
Books
Anything and everything you want
there is honestly nothing more gorgeously tacky than bowling alley carpet
• Never fret about how much stationary you have. You dont need a vast collection of washi tapes, pens and stickers to create a brilliant journal. Your collection will build slowly. Besides, I find that the best of spreads are made from stray scraps and hand drawn pictures etc.
• Also, (and this applies to general artists too) expensive supplies do not automatically make you a better artist. You may want to explore and find your journalling feet first, or at least understand that expensive supplies won't instantly make your spreads incredible, and that the best works can be made from anything, recycled, handmade, cheap, expensive... it's the artist that makes it what it is.
• Hold on to things. Receipts, labels, tickets. Keep these things in a folder too so you always have a treasure trove of bits and bobs.
• In the same vein, keep things like wrapping paper and magazine cutouts. When you don't have access to a printer but feel the inspiration for a spread, you can always resort to these. Plus, they look lovely as borders and backgrounds for pages.
• Dont be afraid to stick things down and just see where it takes you. You dont always have to have an elaborate plan for each and every spread. As I say, the greatest spreads are often the ones thrown together quickly and experimentally.
• Dont be scared to use your supplies!!!! I had this problem before. Your craft supplies are made to be used, so don't be stingy with them. Rip things up, tape things down, go crazy! It's what artists do.
• If you aren't happy with certain pages in your journal, don't rip them out!! It shows creative progress, good spreads and not so good spreads. A journal that was perfect the whole way through would become monotonous, no? In other words, a slow, fast, up and down, loop-de-looping rollercoaster is far more thrilling than a single-speed straight-tracked rollercoaster, isn't it?
• Don't be afraid of changing styles. Again, this book is your own and can be a fun example of how you've grown as an artist. So if you begin with a minimalist, planner-type journal and then decide you prefer aesthetic, scrapbooking styles, no worries!! It's your journal, no one else's.
• Write whatever you want! Your idols, interests, friends and family, life, anything you wish!! This journal is yours and yours alone. Use it like a diary, use it as an open letter to your idols, use it to chronicle your art skills, or just have fun making nice-looking pages! Why not? As long as your having fun, there are no rules or boundaries to journalling, just as there are no rules or boundaries to creating art. Just have fun!!
So Beastars huh?
AU where Tony knew Aunt May and Uncle Ben in college so that in Iron Man 2 when Peter goes to the Stark Expo it becomes a “Charles and Ellen Mulaney meet Bill Clinton” scenario in the Parker household.
Peter: My aunt gets the invitation to the Stark Expo in the mail, and she goes, “We gotta go! We gotta go see Tony!” and without looking at her and just turning the page in a newspaper my uncle goes, “Why? It’s not like he’s going to remember you.“
With great power comes great responsibility. Same motherfucker.
So my aunt says, "Fine, I’ll take Peter.”
And I go, “Heck yeah!” and I slide out into the living room in my Iron Man mask and we walk out the door.