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"Break the chains!” — Polish poster from the Second World War, ca. 1944, published by the Polish Committee of National Liberation (PKWN), the provisional communist authority in Poland during the latter months of the war.
noooooooo don’t commit murder and go to jail you’re so sexy ahahh #AceAttorney
I was so happy when i finally finished this and than i saw how the colors look on my phone and i just wanna commit die :(
Io nella mia testa quando i committenti mi chiedono di disegnare animali e/o sfondi impossibili
#art #artistsontwitter #disagidartisti #draw #drawing #inktober #judoka #Judo
#skyjacks gable in the utena outfit what literal and/or metafictional regicides will they commit
Due to other commitments my new series won't be out anytime soon unfortunately. Meanwhile you can still have a look at the current ones though... 😉
https://t.co/J8PpsRiVk2
#Collectibles #NFTs #art #digitalart #NFTcollectors #creativecoding #Ethereum #generativeart
What crimes did they commit 👀
(I showed this to my mom and she said it looked like a police lineup so I went with it lol. It’s actually a height chart)
First batch of DSMP designs! I’m so excited for this project 😆
I've made the commitment that I'm gonna draw all the big NPCs from my Steampunk campaign, because it's fun.
dont rt
Head
this took so long this is why i dont do lineless but i committed so like..........time to finish the fullbody lol
DRIP.png
with @Grumpyote
im sorry, i've commited crimes against the internet
My alternative version of Akatsuki!Kakashi has a ponytail which shows his rebellion against the Leaf...In this version of story his father was forced to commit suicide by senior leaders. Yet he didn't know abt the truth of Kyuubi etc. bcs obt chose to hide it from him.
Today in Horror, we are celebrating the 57th anniversary of William Castle's and Joan Crawford-led STRAIT-JACKET centered on a woman who, having committed a double-murder of her husband and his lover decades prior, is suspected of a series of axe murders following her release.
The Sacrilegious Theft - Alessandro Magnasco, c. 1731.
The painting illustrates a crime committed on January 6, 1731. The canvas belongs to the church where the attempted sacrilegious robbery took place but for safety reasons it is kept in the Diocesan Museum in Milan.