doppio92
688 posts
red dead side account - also maybe for art? maybe for art. (tagged as #my art) - i'm @doppio92 on twitter!
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chorles!




just a test print, since this has been successful i'm going to refine his model (hair, brows), pose him (pulling his bow?), and then separate him for more efficient printing :D
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NIGHTMARE INDUCING
3 Wolves Howling at the Moon but it's 3 Johns instead
Merry Christmas!
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im a blorbo apologist but also they did every bad thing they did and i will get mad if u ignore that. complexities
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How it feels getting obsessed with something new and then realizing you're going to spend anywhere from a week to the rest of your life thinking about it
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I constantly think about Arthur's quote, "I can barely speak English." because the same man is saying things like, "I must moderate my approach to wine." "Despite my best efforts to the contrary..." or "I have to insist." At times he can be poetic (threatening or not) in the way he says things too. For example, "Maybe when your mother's finished mourning your father, I'll keep her in black on your behalf." Or one of my favorites, "Lack of something to feel important about is almost the greatest tragedy a man can have."
Or how about when he finds that crashed airship along Little Creek River? He mentions Icarus, a Greek myth about a man who flew too close to the sun and the wax melted, causing Icarus to plunge into the sea and drown. At that time not everyone is learning and reading classical literature, you literally have to go out of your way and read that shit in a book. Sure Dutch and Hosea taught him to read, but what outlaw is teaching a teenager about Greek Mythology?
Arthur is smarter than he gives himself credit for. He's by no means stupid. He's self-aware and far more emotionally intelligent than he comes off as.
And it makes it a bit more tragic when you think of the potential Arthur might’ve had outside of being an outlaw.
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Another highly specific resource, Travel in Times!
So how long did it take to travel somewhere in England and Wales in 1680s anyway? Or the 1830s? Or 1910s? Well, the Travel in Times project from Cambridge University is here to help.
Create a route, pick from the eras available, and see how you would get there and how long it would take.
The project currently focuses on three eras that help represent major aspects in travel systems while also giving you an idea of travel speeds during eras of horseback, stagecoach, and train.
This is an ongoing project so the hope is to expand the capabilities and add more maps and data.
(Another, similar, project is also in the works called the Early Modern Digital Itineraries project. As Nov. 22, 2024, the tool is not yet ready for the public. You can follow along with their progress on bluesky)
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