- lines by Purin
- colored by me
I love Satan’s pose in Purin’s art, I wanted to paint it ♥
Somehow it’s more fun to paint interpretation of a sketch than to color a specific lineart. Let’s do it again sometime!
Helga Katrina Sinclair
HAEMOLACRIA
[noun]
a physical condition that causes a person to produce tears that are partially composed of blood. It can manifest as tears that are anything from merely red-tinged to appearing to be entirely made of blood. Haemolacria is a symptom of a number of diseases, and may also be indicative of a tumour in the lacrimal apparatus. It is most often provoked by local factors such as bacterial conjunctivitis, environmental damage or injuries.
(Source: rebel6)
all in all though, this is a grossly inaccurate portrayal of how people who had truly lived under the ground all their lives would actually act
- they wouldn’t say things like “pitch” black
- they would freak the everloving fuck out at suddenly not having a roof…
APEIRON
[noun/adjective]
(ἄπειρον) a Greek word meaning unlimited, infinite or indefinite from ἀ- a-, “without” and πεῖραρ peirar, “end, limit”.
The apeiron is central to the cosmological theory created by Anaximander in the 6th century BC. From the few remaining fragments of his work, it seems that he believed the beginning or ultimate reality (arche) is eternal and infinite, or boundless (apeiron), subject to neither old age nor decay, which perpetually yields fresh materials from which everything we can perceive is derived from. Apeiron, a kind of primal chaos, generated the opposites, hot-cold, wet-dry etc., which creates the momentum for change. All things which exist are generated and destroyed in accordance to fatalistic necessity; in other words, infinite worlds are generated from apeiron and then they are destroyed again.
[word requested by letskillzombiestogether]
HORKOS
[noun]
Greek mythology: Horkos (Ancient Greek: ὅρκος, “oath”) personifies the curse that will be inflicted on any person who swears a false oath. In his Works and Days, Hesiod states that the Erinyes (Furies) assisted at the birth of Horkos, “whom Eris bore, to be a plague on those who take false oath”.
Hesiod’s Theogony identifies him as the son of Eris (“strife”) and brother of Ponos (“toil”), Limos (“starvation”), the Algea (“pains”), the Hysminai (“fightings”), the Makhai (“battles”), the Phonoi (“murders”), the Androktasiai (“man-slaughters”), the Neikea (“quarrels”), the Pseudologoi (“lies”), the Amphilogiai (“disputes”), Dysnomia (“lawlessness”), Atë (“ruin”), and Lethe (“forgetfulness”).
[Click here for alternative version]
Wow that’s amazing, I thought it was fake after seeing them draw on the paper. That alone is ingenious.
what the hell
oh my gOD
i was already dead at the dance dance revolution part
oh man this looks awesome