#trans artisit
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systmiki · 10 months ago
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More stardew boys. Giving the twinks a turn with Elliott.
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galaxies-in-teacups · 8 months ago
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vodkcum · 1 year ago
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visual art music video ish for some loud ass music- more to come
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mars-xxx · 2 years ago
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Just a little drawing of an Eagle I did a camp last weekend
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toothachepup · 3 years ago
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Hey! We gotta pay our internet bill!
Maybe think about commissioning me?
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We got till the 17th!! 0$/100$
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catboi98253 · 5 years ago
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A piece on trans bisexuality
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velemyardrit · 5 years ago
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A little Hornet from me messing around with a new brush
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iknowmydemons · 6 years ago
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Emergency art commisions!!
Hey everyone I know I don’t post my art here but my best friend is on the verge of being kicked out for being trans.  We have two months to collect enough finances for him to be independant.  I will be doing my part by doing emergency commisions, you can message me for prices.
Example of art with lineart, unfinished colouring: 
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m4kthehedge · 7 years ago
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i was feeling crummy but i decided to draw smth to feel better
i realized i never made anything for tdov so here sdfsdfajksfajl
im proud to be nonbinary and pan~
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systmiki · 8 days ago
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First sketch of the year. I don't know if I have any resolutions. I know I want to learn how to drive, at least. And have a table at an event or festival sometime to sell some art. I want to also make a zine!
It was a really rough year, but despite the hardship, I was able to do a lot of fun things. I started going to Saber Guild and TSL. I started going to sword fighting classes. I went to more art showings at the Tom house. I did a lot of fun things with my friends. I took some art chances, even if they didn't all work out. I got back into watercoloring more and been using my brush pens. And I think I've found my voice as an artist and the direction I want to go with my work.
The next few years are a big unknown, but I'm going to keep on going forward and living my truth and my life.
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sweevi · 6 years ago
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it’s not that hard to fuck up a trans character like what the FUCK
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catgirlkaiju-art · 7 years ago
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Haven’t been posting much on here recently, so how about a sketch dump of some stuff I did late last year and early this year?
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mars-xxx · 2 years ago
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An Art Post Since I haven’t done any on here. Just a little One Point Perspective Drawing I did. Lots of time and effort went into this cool piece of art. Hope you enjoy my art! I kind of enjoyed doing this type of art!
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nerdygaymormon · 6 years ago
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Laurie Lee Hall
Laurie Lee Hall is a trans woman. She was born & raised in New England. She remembers identifying internally as a woman from a very young age. She was an artisitic, sensitive teenager and faced the usual round of taunts, slurs and bullying. She would go home at night and put on girl clothes. “I was desperate to become the young woman my body was telling me I would never be.” She was both ashamed and terrified that someone might discover her secret.
After high school she attended Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in upstate New York where she trained to be an architect and construction manager. While a freshman at RPI, a classmate gave her a copy of the Book of Mormon. She read the book and experienced a spiritual witness. Laurie Lee converted and immersed herself in her new church, hoping it’d help her “put that gender thing away.” She even served a mission to Argentina.
After the mission, Laurie Lee went back to school and met her wife, and in 1985 they were married in the Washington D.C. temple.  They soon had 4 children.
Hall kept her identity struggles secret from her spouse. Marriage and family did not cure her feminine feelings, as she hoped. “Living with another woman made it harder for me. She was living the life I wanted to live, doing what I wanted to do – while I had the challenge of living as a male for her.”
In 1996 the stress of living a lie and led her to being deeply depressed and suicidal and unable to function. She quit her job as an architect in Albany, New York. Realizing that “my wife and God loved me – that was enough to realize there was hope,” and she started seeing a therapist, although didn’t reveal the underlying cause of her distress.
The family moved to Utah in 1996 and she began working for the LDS Church. She worked at church headquarters for 20 years until her retirement. For 15 of those years, she was the Chief Architect for the church and as Director of Design and/or Construction for around 40 Temples. During that time she also served as a bishop and then as a stake president in Tooele, Utah. The religious responsibilities, the demanding workload and family obligations (which included adopting a daughter from Ukraine) helped keep her feelings tamped down. Yet, she felt herself evolving as she got more in touch with her feminine side.
In 2010, Laurie Lee was hospitalized for 11 days. While there, she reflected on her personal and professional life. She left the hospital determined to “get in contact with my core self, which included allowing the gender issue to come out of the box.” She had a lot of questions and in the course of exploring them, she learned the words “gender dysphoria” which described what she’d felt since childhood.
In November 2011 she prayed. She didn’t ask if she is a woman, rather she prayed for the first time as a woman and God answered her. Having spiritual confirmation of her truth, now she had to talk with her wife about it. For the first time she revealed all the inner conflicts, suicidal thoughts, not feeling brave enough to share. Together they told their children, all but one accepted their dad as a woman.
It was time to be authentic or die. She let her hair grown, started adding feminine touches to her clothing and started hormone-replacement therapy. She says that the hormones awoke a core level awakening in her body and heart.
In 2012, upon her church leaders learned of her gender-identity, she was quietly released as stake president after serving for 8 years. Four years after being released she came out to her new bishop. Together they developed a plan to tell the ward. In July 2016, on Fast Sunday, the bishop spoke to the congregation about support and affirmation for those who are different, including transgender believers. Next up to the podium was Laurie Lee, dressed as a man, who shared her story and asked for compassion and understanding.  
She continued to attend church each Sunday as a woman with her wife and youngest daughter (now a teenager). “It was a great joy to live authentically, reaching out to others who might be on the fringe as well.”
In September 2016 she retired as a church architect and established a professional coaching & business development consulting practice. She also founded the Families and Gender Variance Project which has the purpose of strengthening love, empathy and communication between gender variant persons and their families.
It didn’t take long before her stake president said she had to either return to living as a man or resign her membership. It seemed like an impossible choice. Giving up her female identity would cause tremendous damage to her physical and mental health. “And it was not in my heart to resign my membership.” So in June 2017 she was excommunicated. A few days later she joined her former colleagues in Provo for a tour of the newly-expanded Missionary Training Center, her final project for the church. She was introduced as one of the chief architects as she stood there in a dress with these LDS designers, officials, leaders and missionaries.
The Church’s handbook speaks of disciplinary actions to be taken for someone who gets “sex-reassignment surgery” (in 2018 it was changed to say “transgender surgery”). However Laurie Lee did not have such surgery. She believes that because she’d served in prominent and visible positions as bishop and stake president that they excommunicated her to register their disapproval of her behavior.
Laurie Lee served on the Board of Directors for Affirmation, which is an organization is an international organization for individuals who identify as gay, lesbian, transgender, bisexual, queer, intersex, or same-sex attracted, and their family members, friends, and church leaders who are members or former members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day.  In August 2018 Laurie Lee Hall was appointed as Vice President of Affirmation to fill a position that had been open for nearly 2 months and will serve the remainder of the year. Following an election of the Affirmation membership, Hall will serve as Senior Vice President for a two-year period, beginning in January.
Laurie Lee Hall uses her experience to help transgender youth and adults to navigate the challenges and triumphs of living authentically. She has blogged and written extensively on the subjects of gender variance and marriage and the intersection of gender and faith traditions. She is the parent of five children and 12 grandchildren.
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glowing-purple-cummies · 2 years ago
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I posted 3,118 times in 2022
That's 3,054 more posts than 2021!
39 posts created (1%)
3,079 posts reblogged (99%)
Blogs I reblogged the most:
@sapphic-crying
@im-a-girly-boy-and-a-tomboy-girl
@gorbyshere
@panpanacea
@kisstheashes
I tagged 301 of my posts in 2022
#artistic - 42 posts
#psa - 17 posts
#nsft art - 14 posts
#please - 13 posts
#artisitic - 13 posts
#ramblings - 9 posts
#prev tags - 8 posts
#nsft text - 8 posts
#trans - 5 posts
#art - 5 posts
Longest Tag: 111 characters
#not just bc a potential partner might not have them but because i'd need to use non-latex specifically and yeah
My Top Posts in 2022:
#5
Apparently I have a thick, massive girlcock as judged by the three (3) people who have seen it.
Pog
4 notes - Posted February 8, 2022
#4
Beautifully shaved and feeling good! I am possible one of the most gorgeous creatures to ever exist, period
6 notes - Posted September 13, 2022
#3
Wish I could fall asleep with my girlcock inside someone. If I wake up first I can pick up where I left off! If they do they can fuck themselves on me until I’m awake enough to pound the shit out of them
11 notes - Posted February 13, 2022
#2
Ok so to my mutuals and stuff…
I’m trying to get off of horny tumblr. It’s nothing about you or my experiences with you I’m just… trying to moderate how much smut I have in my life. I dunno if this blog will see any more use but just in case it doesn’t, thank you. You’ve been a wonderful audience
11 notes - Posted February 27, 2022
My #1 post of 2022
I just want to cuddle with someone and grope each other. I’m too tired to masturbate. I’m too tired to be horny. I just want to feel you there and rub my hands all over your body as I rub whatever junk you have. Hell, if you like maybe I could give you lazy oral sex. Maybe you could give me an exhausted bj. Maybe we watch porn and slowly jerk each other off. Maybe we just kiss. I don’t care. I just want your company. I just want your touch…
13 notes - Posted February 10, 2022
Get your Tumblr 2022 Year in Review →
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womenofcolor15 · 5 years ago
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BEAUTIFUL! Michelle Obama, Viola Davis & More Speak Life Into 4-Year-Old Girl Who Called Herself Ugly
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Celebs are sending light and love to a 4-year-old who was captured on video calling herself ugly. See the heartbreaking video, plus how Michelle Obama, Viola Davis and more reacted inside…
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A video of a 4-year-old little girl calling herself “ugly” has gone viral and now celebs are sending her love and light online.
In the viral clip, 4-year-old Ariyonna is getting her hair done by Atlanta stylist Shabria and that’s when the little girl says “I’m so ugly.”
Stylist Shabria quickly shut that down and told her, “Don’t say that!” as Ariyonna began to cry. “You are so pretty. You have the prettiest little dimples. You are too cute. You have this beautiful chocolate skin. You are just so gorgeous,” Shabria said to her. “Let me see you smile! You have two dimples!,” she continued.
It’s truly heartbreaking!
Watch the clip below:
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                  While doing her hair she had alllll the energy in the world then out of nowhere she stares at herself and gets soooo discouraged it broke my heart into pieces because she has the GREATEST energy and the most beautiful smile and heart ! She comes from a great home & loving mother . I just think when kids go to school they learn and pick up sooo much different things that they don’t know the definition but they know the feeling ! Keep her in your prayers and keep lifting up our future !!!
A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 5, 2020 at 3:24pm PST
"We Must UPLIFT Our Queens," Shabria wrote in the caption of the video. "While doing her hair she had alllll the energy in the world then out of nowhere she stares at herself and gets soooo discouraged it broke my heart into pieces because she has the GREATEST energy and the most beautiful smile and heart ! She comes from a great home & loving mother . I just think when kids go to school they learn and pick up sooo much different things that they don’t know the definition but they know the feeling ! Keep her in your prayers and keep lifting up our future !!!"
After finishing her hair, Shabrina shared a cute video of little Ariyonna:
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��                 YASSS BABYYYY FIX YOUR CROWN SWEETIE
A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 5, 2020 at 4:02pm PST
Aww! She's absolutely adorable.
  Little Ariyonna's video hit home for several celebs, which prompted them to publicly let her know she's more than beautiful. Forever FLOTUS Michelle Obama sent Ariyonna some positive words that made our hearts melt.
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                  Ariyonna, you are gorgeous. In a world that sometimes tries to say otherwise, I want to tell you—and every other beautiful, intelligent, brave black girl—just how precious you are. #blackgirlmagic @lilwavedaddy #Repost @yenedamtew
A post shared by Michelle Obama (@michelleobama) on Mar 10, 2020 at 6:51pm PDT
"Ariyonna, you are gorgeous," Mrs Obama wrote on Instagram. "In a world that sometimes tries to say otherwise, I want to tell you—and every other beautiful, intelligent, brave black girl—just how precious you are. #blackgirlmagic @lilwavedaddy"
Oscar winner Viola Davis saw the video and reinforced what Shabria told her:
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                  of WORTH of BEAUTY! We are fighting hundreds of years of brutal conditioning of being considered less than. It is sprinkled in our language, behavior, laws, music...etc.. and trickles down to our youth. I'm speaking LIFE into Ariyonna. From a sista who looks a lot like you....you were born worthy therefore you were born beautiful! @lilwavedaddy
A post shared by Viola Davis (@violadavis) on Mar 8, 2020 at 9:34am PDT
"THIS is the motivating factor for Black women to leave a legacy...of WORTH of BEAUTY!," Viola wrote. "We are fighting hundreds of years of brutal conditioning of being considered less than. It is sprinkled in our language, behavior, laws, music...etc.. and trickles down to our youth. I'm speaking LIFE into Ariyonna. From a sista who looks a lot like you....you were born worthy therefore you were born beautiful!@lilwavedaddy"
"Orange Is The New Black" actress Laverne Cox chimed in:
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                  Part of the reason I wept so hard when I saw Zaya Wade being applauded and celebrated in my last post is because I saw this post a few days ago on twitter and it broke my heart. And Viola Davis wrote here what I was too overwhelmed to express. bell hooks once wrote loving Blackness is a revolutionary act. Inspired by her words I have said loving transness is a revolutionary act. My trans politics are rooted in intersectional feminist politics taught to me by black women like bell hooks through her books. Teaching stunningly beautiful brown girls like this one to see her profound beauty and worth is our work. Let's get busy. ... Reposted from @violadavis of WORTH of BEAUTY! We are fighting hundreds of years of brutal conditioning of being considered less than. It is sprinkled in our language, behavior, laws, music...etc.. and trickles down to our youth. I'm speaking LIFE into Ariyonna. From a sista who looks a lot like you....you were born worthy therefore you were born beautiful!@lilwavedaddy -
A post shared by laverne cox (@lavernecox) on Mar 9, 2020 at 11:11pm PDT
  "Teaching our Black Daughters Their Beauty and Worth," Laverne wrote. "Part of the reason I wept so hard when I saw Zaya Wade being applauded and celebrated in my last post is because I saw this post a few days ago on twitter and it broke my heart. And Viola Davis wrote here what I was too overwhelmed to express. bell hooks once wrote loving Blackness is a revolutionary act. Inspired by her words I have said loving transness is a revolutionary act. My trans politics are rooted in intersectional feminist politics taught to me by black women like bell hooks through her books. Teaching stunningly beautiful brown girls like this one to see her profound beauty and worth is our work. Let's get busy. ... Reposted from @violadavis of WORTH of BEAUTY! We are fighting hundreds of years of brutal conditioning of being considered less than. It is sprinkled in our language, behavior, laws, music...etc.. and trickles down to our youth. I'm speaking LIFE into Ariyonna. From a sista who looks a lot like you....you were born worthy therefore you were born beautiful! @lilwavedaddy"
Jada Pinkett Smith also reacted to the video:
          View this post on Instagram
                  Kudos to this beautiful woman for loving on this beautiful child! We gotta love on each other! This made my heart sing @lilwavedaddy
A post shared by Jada Pinkett Smith (@jadapinkettsmith) on Mar 7, 2020 at 8:30am PST
  "THIS made me cry!," the Red Table Talk host captioned. "Kudos to this beautiful woman for loving on this beautiful child! We gotta love on each other! This made my heart sing @lilwavedaddy," she wrote.
A whole movement has launched on social media. "Hair Love" director/co-producer Matthew Cherry (who won an Oscar this year for the animated short film) asked for artists to create artwork for Ariyonna using the hashtag #ArtworkForAriyonna:
  Hey #ArtTwitter can we get a collection of drawings together of this sweet little girl who mistakenly called herself ugly like the one @LeislAdams did so we can get a collection of them to her and the hairdresser @LilWaveDaddy that encouraged her. Make sure to include the dimples https://t.co/PyG6wRpnrv
— Matthew A. Cherry (@MatthewACherry) March 7, 2020
  Here are some of the artisitic pieces:
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 7, 2020 at 12:54pm PST
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 8, 2020 at 5:53am PDT
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 8, 2020 at 5:07pm PDT
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 9, 2020 at 7:49pm PDT
  Since then, Ariyonna has been embracing her beauty and even launched an IG account:
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 10, 2020 at 5:13pm PDT
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                  Tag artist if you know
A post shared by @ _imsoariyonna on Mar 10, 2020 at 2:18pm PDT
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                  Tag artist if you know them
A post shared by @ _imsoariyonna on Mar 10, 2020 at 2:18pm PDT
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                  @jahnari.the.finesse.muse thank you
A post shared by @ _imsoariyonna on Mar 10, 2020 at 8:10pm PDT
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                  Everyone Tune In to V103 FM radio station to listen to Ariyonna...
A post shared by @ _imsoariyonna on Mar 9, 2020 at 4:17am PDT
  Since the video went viral, Ariyonna and Shabria have been busy doing interviews in Atlanta:
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 9, 2020 at 5:45am PDT
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 9, 2020 at 1:11pm PDT
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                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 9, 2020 at 5:50pm PDT
  Today...
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                  We made it safely... Thank you everyone
A post shared by @ _imsoariyonna on Mar 11, 2020 at 9:26am PDT
  Ariyonna, her mother and stylist Shabria just touched down in NYC likely to do interviews about her story.
          View this post on Instagram
                      A post shared by We All Value Equality (@lilwavedaddy) on Mar 11, 2020 at 6:31am PDT
  She's going to be appearing on the "Tamron Hall Show" this Friday: 
    This Friday the little girl, Ariyonna, and the woman, Shabria, who delivered this message of love will all be on @TamronHallShow together. https://t.co/9tZr2iDFX2
— Tamron Hall (@tamronhall) March 10, 2020
  We love to see it! And it's this very reason - the lack of media and everyday examples of black people being told they're beautiful and fabulous - that TheYBF.com was born.
  Photo: Shabria's IG
[Read More ...] source http://theybf.com/2020/03/11/michelle-obama-viola-davis-more-speak-life-into-4-year-old-girl-who-called-herself-ugly
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