Summer 2022 KFP gijinka studies ~
Once again thank you to NOT use and repost my art, really, I’ll see it.
If you’re like me, there’s no way you’re buying a fancy packer strap. So here’s a super simple tutorial on how I sewed some of my boxers to fit my packer!
Pls excuse my shitty illustrations I drew them with a sharpie and I’m sleepy rn.
Step 1. Get a pair of boxers with an open fly. The open fly is important because it gives you two layers of fabric to sew a pocket.
Step 2. Sew a little pocket for your packer to sit in. Make sure you position/plan it correctly before sewing so your packer sits in a natural place in your pants.
Step 3. (Inside view yolo) Cut a little hole on the top through the first layer of cloth on the inside only. This is so you can slip your packer inside the little pocket you have just sewn.
That’s it! Im no professional seamstress but I’m a punk, and DIY till I die. Packing is for everyone!!
Hey did you know I keep a google drive folder with linguistics and language books that I try to update regularly
This Realistic Big Crocodile Amigurumi Pattern From Tricks Of The Crochet Is Simply Magnificent! 👉 https://buff.ly/3JiHHlo 🐊
#WANT
froggy tea set
Lace bugs. 500 designs for Mexican drawn-work. 1893.
Internet Archive
This is the first book I'm reading this year! I'm already 50 pages into it, and loving it. I'm a huge fan of anything with more than four legs, and so this book is right up my alley! Here's three things I've learned so far:
1) Fairy wasps spend their entire larval stage within the eggs of other insects
2) Male honeybees have no fathers, as they come only from unfertilized eggs, while the females are from the fertilized eggs.
3) Praying Mantises eat and kill their mates less often in their natural habitat than they do in laboratory settings.
I'm excited to keep reading! Also, if you have any book recommendations, let me know! Especially if it'll help me get buggy with it!
Here is a free pdf of the players handbook
Here is a free pdf of xanathars guide to everything
Here is a free pdf to monsters manual
Here is a free pdf to tashas cauldron of everything
Here is a free pdf to dungeon master’s guide
Here is a free pdf to volo’s guide to monsters
Here is a free pdf of mordenkainen’s tomb of foes
For all your dnd purposes
"In the 70s it was black and minority ethnic people, in the 80s it was gay people, trans people are just the latest to get it in the neck from comedians who can't be bothered to try at their jobs anymore. I cannot stand there and watch another dogshit comedian go: 'Ooohh if a woman can identify as a man, maybe I'll identify as a chair!' Why don't you identify as good comedians, you hack motherfuckers?!"
- Nish Kumar: "It's In Your Nature To Destroy Yourselves pt.2"
Is the fur on some bugs (like bees or caterpillars or moths) an example of convergent evolution with mammals or is the fur on those bugs not fur but something else?
I suppose any fibrous body coating like bird feathers, mammalian fur, or arthropod setae used for protection/insulation/sensation etc could be considered convergence on a functional level, but insect “hair” is an entirely different material!
arthropod setae are made of chitin (a polysaccharide), while your hair is made of keratin (a protein). setae can have many different forms, such as stiff bristles, sensory hairs, or the scales on butterflies, moths, and other arthropods. here is a good resource if you’d like to read about the various types of setae and their functions:
remember you can always get weirder