#using a ref for shading helped so much. instead of trying to wing it like with my other current art 💀
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shadybug 🐞
she isn’t impressed with u.
#miraculous ladybug#shadybug#OBESSED WITH HER DESIGN LOVE IT SO MUCH#I had to draw it#this was. meant to be a fun causual EASY GOING doodle because I needed one after working that taxing never ending art piece 😭😭😭#anyways it Most Definitely wasnt#colours are hard weeps#BUT IT WAS FUN…..#AND SEEING THE FINISHED PROJEXT… MAKES ME V PROUD….#i was half worried it would take ages to finish too lololol#but it wasnt! at all!#I LOVEEEE HERRR <3#shadybug. she certainly looks shady here fjjfjfjf#using a ref for shading helped so much. instead of trying to wing it like with my other current art 💀#anywaysss drawing her now is making me want to draw claw noir#THYE GO AS A PAIR AFTER ALL#ml special#ml spoilers#this took around 2hrs ahaha#my art
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EDIT: I should note Rock's hair IS BLACK, the tone I use on these flat color references is just the midtone I start with for my own personal shading, which is why I didn't include it as a pallet swatch. If you're ever drawing any version of him, just do it however you like doing black hair! Spooky season will be upon us soon and that means I'll be drawing way too much of this sharp toothed bastard between commissions and trades, so I FINALLY MADE HIM A SKETCHY REF. He is yet another AU of my main boy Rockwell of course. We started calling him Puppy way back when as a kind of tongue and cheek cutesy nickname for something not so cute, but it stuck (plus Hundchen a different AU, has pretty much the same meaning so it makes for easy nickname conventions when trying to separate so many versions of the same character). This ref includes some visual details that apply to main canon Rockwell, such as the seam lines mapped out (and their glow), as well as the artificial patterning in the eyes, just with pallet adjustments. It also includes some details I've been thinking of adding for some time but haven't bothered with on any recent-ish sketches of Puppy, like his jointed wings, so now they're all ironed out! Really I should do main Rock's ref soon since this is practically the closest thing he has to one-- maybe after October? If you're curious about Puppy's history and character, I'll try to summarize as best as I can below because it's a little complicated, but there are also some things I'd rather reveal via comics or writing down the road.
Basically his life /was/ similar to Rock's main incarnation up to a point. If you're familiar with Dirge (Dirge's Reference ), you know that our characters interact pretty regularly with the "multiverse" and different versions of themselves and other characters sometimes. Puppy is basically a case of where that went very, very badly. Not gonna write out the gruesome details here, but this basically started as a "bad end" AU that later got expanded upon as our canon became a multiverse instead of several one shot stories. "Infinity", who is mentioned on the reference, is responsible, but since we haven't drawn him up yet, all you really need to know is meeting him anywhere in the multiverse spells disaster for most characters, and instant death if they're lucky. Since Rock's a machine, it's not impossible for data to be corrupted, or for his frame to be heavily altered. Rock's original personality and memories were essentially buried (in some places are completely blank) via extensive trauma and modification. What was left basically exists to cause as much damage as possible to everything in his path (including himself), as you've seen from past goretober pieces. He's got something of an obsession with Infinity, as well as individuals Infinity has a habit of targeting in the multiverse. He's extremely sadistic and excessively violent, so best to avoid if at all possible. Puppy is capable of consuming most materials with his new chompers, and other machines can aid his self repair routines to a degree when eaten (although his auto-repair is artificially slowed down). He can also consume organic matter (and yes, people), but anything living that isn't plant based tends to cause severe damage to his insides. Since he has a tendency for self destruction and sometimes even auto-cannibalism it's really a moot point but y'know. Which brings us to the multiple personalities presented in the ref itself. As with all things, there's more than one instance of Puppy in the multiverse, and in a few cases where he doesn't just die at some point via combat or self inflicted damage, he's actually getting some help recovering. What's presented in the ref are basically the three main versions worth talking about, one of which that serves as an in-between for the two extremes. If you have questions ask away, but that's what I can say without ??? spoiling too much stuff.
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Merry Christmas, @aqua-ref!
Read on AO3
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Give Me To A Ramblin' Fae
In the middle of winter, when the moon is heavy in the sky, dripping with milky light and offering, whole and raw, its' power, the Hale Pack gathers around the Nemeton, they dance and they sing, and they shift into their animal skeins to frolic, to chase each other with yipping howls and laughing barks.
Derek has Laura's throat held gently between his maw, and she whines at him to let go, but rumbles approvingly, because he doesn't often win these games of theirs; it is not a matter of low power, more of the target he chooses. The Alpha's heir will, after all, be more difficult to beat than the others. She nips at his ear playfully, urges him along, and they weave through the barren, wind-beaten trees, their paws soaked with snow-melt, muddying the crunchy ivory-fluff that chills the ground beneath them.
There's an undulating, calling, rejoicing howl from their mother that has them leaving a chestnut hare to its' frightened peace in order to return to her, to the Pack.
Through the branches, they can see the sky, all adorned in twilight, hosting, now, a parade of riders, their pandemonium an awe and a terror. Spectral beings ride black mares and stallions, ominous dogs of bared teeth and frothing spit and hideously haunting eyes are careening, entwining and twisting around toned legs and pristine hooves as the steeds gallop forward, heedless. Blackbucks and stags dash, their riders luminescent smoke and vicious intent. Creatures with starlight-encrusted, stained-glass wings, and horns which they blow to hail their passing, fly gracefully around the nocturnal horde, singing or shrieking, cavorting and cackling.
It's a dreadful, terrific sight, that streaks through the night sky, and when the Pack's howl breaks out, full-force, hopeful and evocative, every wolf lifting their song to the ghastly, ghostly peoples as they pass, some of those dragonfly, stardust folk descend, screaming and giggling, a gaggle of raucous temerity, as they gather the wolves in their airborne festivities, and launch them toward the procession.
The whimsical, urgent needs, and maddening power that surround The Hunt quickly seeps into the Pack, makes them drunk and giddy, all of them running with ancient spirits, wildlings, Fair Folk of every type.
Derek's lungs are stung by the rush, his blood electric with the adrenaline when an ephemeral, fey, svelte-lithe boy with bull's horns, skin like cream sprinkled with cinnamon, and mosaic wings that inspire the feeling of fertile soil and fields of growing, healthy, rain-soaked things, comes to him. His oak-silk curls are plaited with holly and mint, a leather-bound necklace hangs heavy around his long, dainty, breakable neck, a crescent moon-charm at the hollow of his throat, surrounded by crystal orbs and autumn leaf-charms, brass acorns and pine-cones, he wears nothing else, unashamed in his nudity.
"Hello," the boy says, bright and sweet, his voice like the delicate silk-dew mist of a cumulus cloud, and Derek feels himself tilt closer without even meaning to. "You're gorgeous. I wonder what you look like in your human form? Honestly, I wonder what everyone here looks like in their human forms. We all have one, you know?"
Honestly, no, he didn't, he was kind of caught up in the romanticism of it all.
All scents are clouded by the musk of wild, old magick, stained by an odd, dense-soil ecstasy, and a part of him, vivid and, for one, fanatic moment, overwhelming, wants to eviscerate the aroma The Wild Hunt carries, if only so he can learn what this boy might smell like.
"Everyone who sees us thinks we're malevolent or scary, but, honestly, dude, we're just escorting the spirits Grandmother Death didn't have the time or patience to get to to their respective homes. We've all still got day jobs—I mean, you have a day job, pretty wolfling that you are, don't you?"
Numbly, helplessly, and a little more sober, now, Derek nods.
The boy grins at him, crooked and terribly endearing, fire-light eyes sparkling in the dim, mist-fog, shadowed light.
"See?" He says, gesturing, "Even Odin's got one, Odin, the God of knowledge, inspiration, creative and intellectual pursuits, the dead, fucking road rage—that guy, the head honcho, the one at the head of this whole operation. Like, in this economy, where barely anyone has the Sight anymore, and the number of people left who believe are too few and far between, what else are we supposed to do? It's not like causing havoc and stealing things is going to garner us any good-will, man, so here we are, doing the good work, and then tomorrow we'll go home and agonize over our bills just like everybody else." The faerie heaves a sigh, before blinking and seeming to realize himself, his cheeks burn a vivid, enchanting crimson when a harassing, incredulous, exasperated wail sounds from above.
"Oops," he breathes, a nervous giggle edging in, "I am so not supposed to do that, and I've just been rambling at you, and—" the wail comes again, more pressing this time. The boy groans, eyelashes fluttering down in mortification. "Sorry, I'll see you later, maybe?" Fragile, paper-thin wings flutter, and bone-nimble fingers tangle in the fur at Derek's flank to help the faerie wade close enough to press a candied, chaste kiss to his wolven cheek.
He says, "I'm Stiles, by the way," and grins like he isn't aware of how dangerously beautiful that expression is, before he zooms away in a sweeping, upward glide.
Derek gets a small glimpse of another fae, donned in a flowing, powder-blue toga-dress, with moth-like wings and magma curls flowing down to her waist, admonishing Stiles exhaustively, before their speed, much more than the wolves and the steeds and the dogs, has them blurring out of sight, catching up to a cluster of swarming fae up ahead, too far to spy on any longer.
Derek tries to get his thundering heart to calm and wonders why he ever thought love at first sight was a superstitious, optimistic myth, if not an outright lie.
Days later, after all the Dead have been put to their proper rest, a few offerings of milk and cookies meant for 'Santa' were traded for faerie favors, and quite a few more rogue, feral creatures were stolen and re-sewn into ravens or crows or hunting dogs, of the ilk to sleep the whole year away, and only wake when The Wild Hunt, again, takes place—Stiles is trying, valiantly, to focus.
His mind keeps tracing back to eyes like stars winking to tenacious life, to obsidian fur and sinewy muscle, a warbling wolf-song that lilted like a lullaby, all hymn-hope, resounding howl, to the way sharp, ink-fluffy ears kept flickering to him, listening and curious and three shades shy of entranced. He doesn't know why he's so caught up on it, this is the sixth year he's been old enough to participate in The Hunt, and they have wolves with them every time, thousands of Packs from all of the world join them, so why was he so attracted, distracted, by this one?
What was so special about him?
Other than the, you know, sand-escaping-his-fingers, barely tangible, general everything.
Stiles sighs despondently, and Lydia, who's probably been talking about Important College Things, hits him upside the head promptly.
"A—ow!" Stiles rubs the back of his head, glaring balefully at her. Her hand retreats to flick her hair over her shoulder in one fluid, deflecting motion, as if to dissuade anyone who might've noticed her uncouth action from registering it as more than a figment of their imagination, nothing to see here, folks!
He loves her, he does, but some days he wants to strangle her.
Just a little.
"You were sighing again," she points out, lashes grazing her cheeks as she looks down at her book, flips the page flippantly, like studies on how mathematical algorithms affect neurology bore her. "It's starting to get annoying, Stiles."
"Shut up. It's not like I can even do anything about it," he laments, complaining even though he knows it'll only be a study in disappointment and masochism, at this point. "Who is he? where does he live? work? For all I know, I'm infatuated with some Turkish Lord who I won't even have the slightest chance of seeing again until next year."
Lydia snaps her book shut with a sound that manages to be both refined and abrupt enough to startle. "What on earth were you doing galavanting with the lower-tiers, anyway? We aren't supposed to talk to them, Stiles—"
"But, he was—"
"If he had been a ghost instead of a solid, you could've been lost to the spirit-tide, and you know The Hunt doesn't discern when it comes to a close—you could be on the other side of the Veil by now, instead of sitting here, fawning!"
She's heaving by the end of her rant, cheeks flushed, sea-glass eyes glittering angrily, and Stiles knows her fury is borne from worry, from a very real fear. He remembers his mother, how she was all love and sweet-tempered fire, how she gave coins to the more corporeal spirits, gleefully hugged and spun yarns and danced with all the riders, always careful of the spirit-tide, of getting caught in its' undertow, until she got sick, and couldn't remember to be.
Neither Stiles nor Lydia had been old enough to go, yet, and Stiles' dad was human. Lydia's grandmother, they think, tried to stop her, to save her, but ended up just as lost and mourned as she.
He feels guilt curdle in his chest and exhales heavily. "I'm sorry, Lyds, I am. I don't know why I did that, I'll—next year, I'll stay in the upper-tiers, like I'm supposed to," he inclines his head solemnly, reaches across the library table to hold both her hands in his, "I promise."
She squeezes his fingers, sniffs, her voice evaporated misty at the edges, "You damn well better, you idiot."
He offers her a sincere, sorrow-tinged smile, and tries to put the entire thing out of his mind.
It's New Year's Eve, and Stiles is exhausted, between studies and random research stints and trying to keep the Kelpies three doors down from killing and/or getting killed by the vampires that live in the apartment downstairs, he thinks he has every right to be. Still, though, Lydia put at least a quarter of her heart and soul into organizing this party, and if he hadn't come, he's sure she would've had him flayed.
So, here he is, sleep-deprived, delirious, eying the bar and wondering if getting drunk when all he's been living off of for the past three days is coffee, is at all a good idea. It isn't, it really fucking isn't, but...
But he's got nothing else to do, and tomorrow it'll be a new year, right? Might as well live a little.
Derek smiles briskly at the lady with a bird's nest of raven-black hair as he hands her her drink, and purposefully ignores the blonde at the end of the bar who's been whistling and snapping at him imperiously for the past fifteen minutes.
He's half tempted to text Cora and ask her what the hell she was thinking, pulling him behind the counter to fill in for her so she could go after the strawberry-blonde party hostess with a number and a cheap pickup line caught in her too-sharp teeth, because, yeah, he's got enough experience not to flounder (he'd found himself hiding from the rain in a drag bar while he was still in high school, and they let him hang out despite his age because he was a good enough cook that as long as he didn't touch the alcohol, they didn't care, and when you're in that sort of close-knit, street-smart gritty, overprotective Pack-like environment, it's impossible not to learn the tricks of the trade), but his customer service has always been shit.
With someone like Peter as an Uncle, he's capable of plastering on a smile and flirting a pretty lie with the best of them, he just doesn't fucking liketo. In fact, it's something he actively avoids unless lives are in danger.
Then a voice, one he remembers, all whispered silk-cotton dream-thread collecting raindrops in its' seams, starts murmuring a sugary melody in his periphery, and his eyes snap to its' source with a breathless, near frantic urgency.
And there he is.
Like Fate.
Like a fucking miracle.
He looks different, horns and wings gone, still with the wind-swept, earthy curls, though their holly-mint braids are nowhere to be found; dressed in a long-sleeved, charcoal gray shirt that cling to his lithe, agile-built muscles, an unzipped crimson hoodie layered over it, skin-tight jeans and ridiculous, neon-orange vans, but there's that leather-bound charm necklace, heavy around the length of his pretty throat, with a crescent-moon hanging just at the hollow, and it's him.
The rambling faerie he met on The Wild Hunt, absently humming a tune as he messes with his phone, patiently waiting for a bartender to notice him, at a college party on New Year's Eve.
The surreality of this is... not lost on him.
"Hello," Derek greets, sliding into the boy's- Stiles', if he remembers right- space.
"Oh, uh," he looks up from, and pockets, his phone, a little bashful, "I always thought you had to make eye contact to get, like, served, or whatever, but, um, hi?"
Derek tries to bite back a smile.
Fails.
"Hi," he repeats, and the boy blinks at him dumbly for a solid five seconds before just breathing:
"Wow. You're gorgeous."
And Derek can't help it, he barks out a laugh. "You said that last time."
"I did? Wait, I did? When?! I've met you?" he sounds outraged, on his own behalf, scandalized, even. "No," he denies, "no way, I would've remembered meeting someone like you and then doing something as stupid as calling you gorgeous to your face without any sort of filter—and, wow, smooth sailing, me. I am so sorry about that, by the way, color me extremely embarrassed, but. Yeah, no. No way in hell I've committed the same social faux-pas twice with the same person, I refuse to believe it."
Derek smirks, even as something warm and giddy and compelled sets up camp in his heart, with a kind of tenacity that says it'll be staying a long while.
"Well, I wasn't exactly a person at the time," he points out, "but I appreciated the compliment both times, Stiles, so you... really shouldn't worry about it."
"I—you—" Stiles sputters, freezes, mouth agape and molten-caramel doe-eyes very, very wide, before he seems to reboot. "You are kidding me," he says, feelingly, before pitching forward over the counter to grab Derek's face with his hands, searching his eyes intently.
Derek tries to be anything other than amused and endeared.
Fails, again.
"Wolfling," Stiles accuses, awed. "I didn't think I was ever going to see you again."
"Rambling fae," Derek muses, hushed, leaning further into Stiles' space even as he pushes the boy down into a bar-stool, because while he might not take offense, the other on-duty bartender, or, even, the party hostess, might. "Neither did I."
Stiles sucks in a very deep breath, and then spills out any number of tangential, spiraling questions, what's your name? Where do you live? Are you a bartender? can I have your number? I'd really like your number. Are you—
Derek crushes the rest in a kiss that tastes like sunlight and cherry-tart and ozone, Stiles melts into it with a helpless, keening whine, his spine curving up, shoulders opening, head tilting, whole body blooming like a flower, begging to be plucked, held, kept, known.
He answers what his fleeting thoughts will let him, mutters the words into Stiles' warm, slick-wet, receptive mouth, his name, that his Pack lives in town, that he isn't, but his sister is, and he's covering for her. With a drawn-out sigh, he does force himself to pull away, eventually.
Probably not soon enough, honestly.
"Take me out," Stiles says immediately, dazed, lips kiss-bruised enchanting, and then flushes that same, deep, candied, lascivious red as before. "Or. I mean. I want to date you. Can we go on a date? Not right now, obviously, but—"
"Yes," Derek grins, overwhelmed, blood champagne-effervescent, "yeah, I'd really like that."
Stiles exhales heavily, laughs, a little incredulously, shakes his head at himself, and then smiles, soft and marshmallow-fluffy up at him, "Awesome."
Derek begins to think that, maybe, he needs to give Cora a fruit-basket. Or, possibly, Odin, and that's... well.
That may well be the cherry on top of an incredibly strange, unusual, wonderful meeting.
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