Here I am again, sharing another weapon for Sir Moon:
https://www.instagram.com/reel/C3-bE5wuyEd/?igsh=d3J6bmZyZWJ4ankw
He would pull something like this XD
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I drew crosshair, using a toothpick on one of those rainbow scratch thingys.
(No pressure to respond btw) @superiorsniper
Filters work on it HAHHA
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I knew Crosshair would have a cool story from the beginning of the bad batch so I'm really happy to see everyone loving him in my art. He deserves it all.
Especially his toothpicks bring those back.
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princess is thrilled with the growing larp armoury!
Twig villagers are working late into the night helping to make gear. and whoa, a weapon rack made of bits and sticks?! princess is impressed…
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crack whump i come up with at midnight
ok so so so you know those stupid fancy party appetisers that are like cheese stabbed onto a toothpick. yeah so imagine whumper party and like maybe pet whumpees? like they're there to look pretty and serve and shit. Whumpee appetiser board or whatever they're fucking called. just lay whumpee on the table and stab their back full of toothpicks, yeah.
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There are multiple official artistic depictions of Monty with a toothpick in his mouth. My headcanon is that he doesn't actually need to use toothpicks, but he chews on them because he thinks it makes him look cool.
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💥Toothpick Man is back and on the loose!💥
If you enjoy this video please give it a like and comment on the original! ^-^
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You’ll note that some of these implements are ornate—“picks” feels like a lackluster descriptor. Fancy toothpicks were a mark of sophistication in Shakespearean-era Britain, so much so that the Bard of Avon mentioned them in several of his plays, including Much Ado About Nothing, King John All’s Well That Ends Well, and Winter’s Tale. They remained a big deal in life and literature well into the 1800s, making cameos in the likes of Sense and Sensibility (here’s a whole podcast episode about toothpicks in the Regency era; thanks to Stannie Holt for the tip) and Mark Twain’s Life on the Mississippi.
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