More Laser-Eyed Loon Art

Jan. 13th, 2026 01:52 pm
lydamorehouse: (Default)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
 laser loon
Image: the "don't tread on me" snake being beheaded by a laser-eyed loon with the Minnesota flag on its chest (created by Andrew Prekker).

You know I love my laser-eye loons and I could not have been happier to see this art pop up on my Facebook Feed. Andrew is selling this art on Redbubble and I bought a t-shirt immediately. (Feel free to click the link and get your own merch.) For those of you new to my journal, I posted about Minnesota's collective enjoyment out of imagining that the red eyes of the loon could (and should!) shoot laser beams in the past. My library card has a loon with lasers shooting out of its eyes and we NEARLY had a state flag with a loon shooting laser beams out of its eyes.

One thing I have learned while living in a police state is that I need to do one good thing a day or I go out of my mind with stress. Today, when I realized I was just pacing around the house trying not to doom scroll, I found out that Smitten Kitten (for out-of-towners, this is a sex positive, trans and queer owned sex shop) has been acting as a distribution center for people who are in hiding from the gestapo. They put out a call for diapers, etc. So, I hopped in my car, bought a few things at my local Menards, and then drove over to drop them off. Just feeling the energy in the shop, being greeted by people still excited to see my queer D&D t-shirt (actually ConFABulous, which I talked to the person about potentially coming to this next year)... it felt good, maybe even kind of normal in a This is NOT normal sort of way?

Right now, at 6:30 pm,  I'm going to go throw on my coat and go sing with some neighbors. I am, apparently, someone who needs to DO.  

Stay strong out there, everybody!



When Henry Met Janet

Jan. 14th, 2026 12:09 am
shakalooloo: (Ant-Man)
[personal profile] shakalooloo posting in [community profile] scans_daily
06



Even in its earliest days, the relationship between the Ultimate Universe Ant-Man and Wasp is much more heartwarming than any previous interpretation!

Read more... )

Ultimate Endgame #1

Jan. 13th, 2026 11:56 pm
shakalooloo: Herbie (Nono)
[personal profile] shakalooloo posting in [community profile] scans_daily
03



No, neither Wolverine nor Storm appears inside, no matter how prominent the cover may imply them to be.

There are revelations and deaths within, but to my eye the most important detail is the introduction of an Ultimate verion of a character that the first Ultimate universe foolishly ignored:

Read more... )
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public


347/365: No Road, Bewdley
Click for a larger, sharper image

This was another day when not a lot of interest really happened. It didn't help that it rained a good deal in the morning, although fortunately the river was low enough beforehand that the flood barriers haven't needed to be deployed. I did pop into Forest Dog Rescue and bought a box of teabags, of all things. The photo shows No Road, which leads off Load Street in Bewdley town centre. Yes, it's actually called No Road. This is a public footpath, and not quite as scary as it may appear! It comes out in Dog Lane, where the chemist and GP surgery are, so it can be quite a handy shortcut.

Vocabulary: Mountweazel

Jan. 13th, 2026 05:25 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Mountweazel [mount-wee-zuhl]

noun
1. a decoy entry in a reference work, such as a dictionary or encyclopedia, secretly planted among the genuine entries to catch other publishers in the act of copying content.

(More details on [community profile] 1word1day)

Snowflake Challenge 7: Self-Love

Jan. 13th, 2026 05:01 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Snowflake Challenge 7: Self-Love

LIST THREE (or more) THINGS YOU LIKE ABOUT YOURSELF. They don’t have to be your favorite things, just things that you think are good. Feel free to expand as much or as little as you want.

While we’re busy celebrating fandom, it’s good to remember to celebrate ourselves, too. Fandom is all of us! I know it’s often easier to talk about what we like about other people than it is to talk nicely about ourselves, but challenge yourself here
.


A gold snowflake ornament is nestled amidst pine boughs

Read more... )

i do hope you have a dime

Jan. 13th, 2026 05:40 pm
musesfool: LION (bring back naptime)
[personal profile] musesfool
I barely slept on Sunday night - maybe about 3 hours in total? - so I called out yesterday and went back to bed. I felt better but not great upon waking again after actually sleeping for another 2 hours, and spent most of the day zoned out on the couch, looking at tumblr. Last night I slept hard and today I woke up feeling much better, but ugh, sleep should not be so hard!

I know it's just January and winter but I can feel myself withdrawing and hermiting up, so if I'm late in responses to comments, that's why - it's definitely not you, it's me.

*

Art

Jan. 13th, 2026 04:49 pm
lauradi7dw: (fish glasses)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
At the end of December, I went to see an exhibition at what is calling itself the Harvard Art Museums, although it was only one of them. I'm a little confused but don't care what they call themselves
https://harvardartmuseums.org/exhibitions/6465/sketch-shade-smudge-drawing-from-gray-to-black
There was a lot of technical information about what one can do with different black things (pencil, crayon, charcoal) on different kinds of paper. I learned some stuff. Based on some of the displays and things I saw in other parts of the museum, I started to wonder whether the museum was originally put together as a teaching aid for Harvard students. The placards throughout are very informative and in some cases thought-provoking.
Also there is some amazing stuff on the walls. Harvard has a lot of wealthy donors.

The Boston Museum of Fine Arts has had an exhibit featuring Winslow Homer's work.
https://www.mfa.org/exhibition/of-light-and-air-winslow-homer-in-watercolor

I kept putting off going because it meant looking up my member password to book the timed ticket (really). I had heard from other people how crowded it was and knew from experience that weekends would probably be the worst, so I went yesterday. My Mondays are back to being goofy - my volunteer shift ends at 1 PM (in Boston) and my Korean class doesn't start until 6 PM. It's not always the case that I want to spend the afternoon in a library. It seemed like the ideal time to see the exhibit. It was *still* very crowded, even though there are timed tickets. It is the last week, though, so maybe it was full of procrastinators. I previously would only have been able to recognize the most famous paintings (two boys in a field, guys in boats, ladies at the edge of a cliff over a beach). I was intrigued at the work he did for Harpers Weekly, covering the Civil War. Like the exhibit at Harvard, there was a case of his materials, with discussions throughout about the paper choices. I didn't lean in as closely as some people, but I think some of the paintings were just as is, with no glass. I really wanted to touch the paper. I did not do so.
I took a lot of photos. The one I like best is not something I feel that I can post here, because it is of a fellow art-looker, whose permission I did not ask. There was a fake boat with paddle and a suitably scaled wall background so that someone could sit and try to look like one of the paintings we had seen. It was very well organized and included a spot on the floor where the amateur photographer was supposed to stand to take the picture. The subject in question was posing fairly patiently while his companion fumbled with her phone. I took his picture.
While I was downstairs in the museum anyway, I went to see an exhibit of 20-21st century quilts made in China.
https://www.mfa.org/exhibition/one-hundred-stitches-one-hundred-villages
Some of them included information about the makers, some were anonymous but presumed to be made by women. A passerby said "they don't look Chinese." By that did she mean they could have been patchwork quilts from other parts of the world? I guess so. As the blurb linked above says
>>Though viewers familiar with American quilt patterns may be surprised to notice many similar designs, these Chinese works represent a tradition all their own.<<
As I got ready to take a picture of a quilt I realized that looking at it through the camera and looking at it with bare eyes gave me a very different view. I was startled. I tried looking in different ways. I called over some passersby to see if they saw the same discrepancy. Yes. In the photo, the white parts pop so much that the cross shape really jumps out at one. Just looking at it, they don't seem any more prominent than the other shapes. Is the camera doing something? Is my eye/brain perception smoothing things to make more of a gestalt?



I saw some other stuff as well, and then left, but I wasn't done with art. On the way from the MFA to class I decided to detour slightly so that I could get a burrito from the 300 year old Chipotle on the Freedom Trail (that's a joke. The basic building is from 1718 but the Chipotle hasn't been there that long)
https://npplan.com/parks-by-state/massachusetts-national-parks/boston-national-historical-park-park-at-a-glance/boston-national-historical-park-freedom-trail/boston-national-historical-park-historic-sites/boston-national-historical-park-old-corner-bookstore/
There is some new public art in a couple of places near there.
And I had interacted with some art of a different sort before I even went to the museum. I walk down Charles Street nearly every Sunday and had been looking in a shop window for a long time. On a Monday afternoon it was open and I went in. It's called December Thieves and has small quantity independent designer garments from around the world. I asked a lot of questions. I didn't buy anything. The garment I found most intriguing but also kind of befuddling is this coat, which is short in the back and long in the front, and has some raw edges. If a small-run item is a work of art, would I be defacing it by hemming the bottom or flat-felling the seams? It doesn't matter - the only one they have left seems to be the one in the window, which the website says is an XS.
https://decemberthieves.com/products/la-vaca-loca-sueno-asymmetric-layered-wool-blend-jacket
It's nearly $700. I don't know what a sensible price would be, but I hope the sewist was well paid.
I've been thinking about an exhibit that is supposed to be at the SFMOMA in October+.
https://www.sfmoma.org/press-release/sfmoma-announces-2026-exhibitions-including-transformed-fisher-collection-galleries-matisses-femme-au-chapeau-and-rm-x-sfmoma/
$700 could cover a good bit of the cost of going to see it. That seems like a ridiculous trip idea, but it keeps being evident that standing right in front of a work of art is not like looking at it in a book or online.
maevedarcy: (nabrielise)
[personal profile] maevedarcy posting in [community profile] pinchhits
Event: Holly Poly 2025
Event link: [community profile] holly_poly 
Pinch hit link: Details and claims in this post
Due date: January 25


#2: Riverdale (TV 2017), Glee (TV 2009), Person of Interest (TV) 

#5: The Elementalists (Visual Novel), Heart of Battle - Fay Ikin, Havenfall is for Lovers (Visual Novel)

12: Nosferatu (2024), IT (Movies - Muschietti), Hellraiser (Movie 2022), Hemlock Grove, Skinwalkers (2006), crossover - Fandom 

13: Akatsuki no Yona | Yona of the Dawn, Shoujo Kakumei Utena | Revolutionary Girl Utena (Anime & Manga), Miraculous Ladybug, Bakuage Sentai Boonboomger (TV), Original Work 

14: Dangan Ronpa Series, Grisaia Series (Visual Novels), Buffy the Vampire Slayer & Related Fandoms, 裸執事 | Hadaka Shitsuji | Naked Butlers (Visual Novel), Clannad 

15: Haikyuu!!, Ouran High School Host Club - All Media Types, Wind Breaker (Anime), Saiki Kusuo no Sai-nan | The Disastrous Life of Saiki K., Bungou Stray Dogs, Boku no Hero Academia | My Hero Academia (Anime & Manga), While You Were Sleeping (TV) 

End-of-year wrap-up meme for 2025

Jan. 14th, 2026 10:29 am
china_shop: Bert and Ernie have a rubber duck (Bert & Ernie with rubber duck)
[personal profile] china_shop
2023 meme | 2021 meme | 2019 meme | 2018 meme | 2017 meme | 2016 meme | 2015 meme | 2014 meme | 2013 meme | 2012 meme | 2011 meme | 2010 meme | 2009 meme | 2008 meme | 2007 meme | 2006 meme

Meme! I've missed a couple of years, here and there, but I really want to maintain this tradition. In the interests of getting this done, I'm going to omit any questions I get stuck on. ;-p

But first I'll start with three self-recs from 2024, when I didn't do this meme.

  1. After the Waiting (10,195 words, Guardian, outsider POV on the SID & on Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan's new relationship, post-canon)

  2. The Best Thing for Everyone (8,726 words, Time of Fever/Unintentional Love Story, Go Hotae/Kim Donghee, bridging the gap between the two canons, angsty ending with hope for the future)

  3. Breakage and Repair (5,247 words, Guardian, Chu Shuzhi/Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan, post-canon, angst --> get-together)


My 2025 fanworks and modding )

The Meme (for 2025) )

12 Week Year WAM Week 03

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:10 pm
andersenmom: SWORD (DongHyun)
[personal profile] andersenmom
So I'm behind: I was ill for the first three weeks of this current 12 Week Year, so there are no other reports.

Weekly Score: 60% (24/40)

Goal 1: Increase my spirituality. 63% (10/16)

Review: This went not well at all. Between still recovering from the illness and traveling for the weekend (and all the prep that goes into that), I let a lot slide.

Goal 2: Fit better in my clothes / feel better in my body. 41% (7/17)

Review: Totally failed on this one, too. Writing down everything is harder than I thought, but I'm still working on it. I'll keep working on it.

Goal 3: Whittle down my to-do list. 100% (7/7)

Review: I managed to get this all done, which was a surprise. I ended up doing my Weekly Review on Thursday, since we left on Friday, and chose the next thing to work on. I hope to finish those all this week, too.

Intentions for the future: G1 - I have been studying Atomic Habits, and I have a lot of good ideas on that to get these habits going. G2 - Same as above. I still don't know how to make it work, but I'll keep working on it. G3 - I'll just keep plugging along, work on the area of focus I decided on, and do as much outside of that as I can get done.

Fannish50 #47: Wendy - Wish You Hell

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:08 pm
andersenmom: (Freak Out!)
[personal profile] andersenmom
I'm a huge fan of Red Velvet, but not so much that I know the women or can pick out which is which. I don't remember where we saw this one, but it went down on the list of things that we wanted to find again, as we only heard a small part of the chorus. It did not disappoint.

As a side note, I have a friend with a horrible ex-husband, and I played this for her. She doesn't care for my K-pop, but she loved this. I found her singing it a couple of times. Also, Vic and I were singing it on the way out of a store, and some lady told us she liked the song. It's just... perfect.

themis1: Lightning (Default)
[personal profile] themis1 posting in [community profile] girlmeetstrouble
Chapter 12: Read more... )

Comment: I honestly think Fleming phoned this book in! The thugs behave idiotically, Bond’s heroic rescue of Viv involves him dragging her across the ground by her feet (he couldn’t have picked her up?!) and a man who in other books has dealt with hoards of bad guys is suddenly telling her he’s 007 in case he doesn’t survive dealing with these two incompetent thugs?! And Viv is rather quick to decide Bond isn't like the other men she's been involved with, when she's only just met him ...

Chapter 13: Read more... )

Comment: Well, Viv is very much both in the action and in trouble in this chapter! Bond is … less efficient than I would’ve expected, but it’s a long time since I read the other books.

snowflake day 6: top ten

Jan. 13th, 2026 03:55 pm
sixbeforelunch: Sherlock Holmes and John Watson from the Grenada adaptation (holmes and watson 3)
[personal profile] sixbeforelunch
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Challenge #6: Top Ten

My anxiety sounds like metal scratching on glass and I am comfort-seeking so for the snowflake top ten, have ten things, mostly media, I turn to for comfort.
Read more... )

Early Humans

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:49 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Discovery shows early humans were much more advanced hunters than previously believed

On stone arrowheads left in a South African rock shelter, researchers found 60,000-year-old traces of plant poison.

A team working in Sweden and South Africa analyzed quartz tips from Umhlatuzana Rock Shelter in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

A residue on one artifact can be a fluke, but repeats on older and newer arrowheads are harder to dismiss.



*laugh* Hominids helped wipe out 98% of land animal body mass. What did scientists think, all they were doing was running up and stabbing megafauna until it dropped dead? Yeah, no. Arrow poison. Channel traps, pit traps, cliff traps. Fire. Collecting scat to frame one predator for encroaching on another predator's territory, then watching them shred each other and sneaking up to dispatch the weakened loser.

"Work smarter, not harder" has been the hominid strategy for millions of years.

Snowflake Challenge

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:47 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
... is scheduled to appear at 4PM Eastern time, which is 3PM Central time -- so 10-15 minutes from now. It's a planned variation, no need to worry.

Snowflake Challenge: A pair of ice skates hanging on a wood paneled wall. Pine boughs with a few ornaments are stuffed into the skates.

Space Exploration

Jan. 13th, 2026 02:42 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This strange form of water may power giant planets’ magnetic fields

Water pushed to planetary extremes turns into an exotic, electricity-conducting solid — and it’s far stranger than scientists ever imagined.

At extreme pressures and temperatures, water becomes superionic — a solid that behaves partly like a liquid and conducts electricity. This unusual form is believed to shape the magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune and may be the most common type of water in the solar system. New high-precision experiments show its atomic structure is far messier than expected, combining multiple crystal patterns instead of one clean arrangement. The finding reshapes models of icy planets both near and far
.

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