The Ending by Itoko_(ldoll_itk)
hello vonnie
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
I'd rather be in outer space šø
i don't do bad sauce passes
Sade Olutola
cherry valley forever

izzy's playlists!

oozey mess
sheepfilms
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

JBB: An Artblog!
Cosmic Funnies
Aqua Utopiaļ½ęµ·ć®åŗć§čØę¶ćē“”ć
dirt enthusiast
$LAYYYTER

NASA
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
seen from United States
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States
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seen from Mexico
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@luminarycollector
The Ending by Itoko_(ldoll_itk)

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I Like Sweet Stuff by Itoko_(ldoll_itk)
I imagine them to be a happy family in the modern AU where Fengxian and Lakan are married and Lahan and Maomao are their children. Fengxian would be strict but she very much dotes on her kids (just not as obviously as Lakan, but who can compare with Lakan).
I feel like Lakan would be a lawyer which would put his skills to use, whereas Fengxian would be an academic in mathematics, and of course they're both super good at xiangqi and go in different ways. (I'd like to think Fengxian taught Lahan a lot of maths when he was younger and that encouraged his love for the subject).
I love how much payoff there is in this end-of-season Frieren vs replica fight because up until now Frieren has been restrained in her use of offensive magic.
Like - until this point, Frieren and Fern have pretty much exclusively used Zoltraak (the most basic of modern offensive spells) when they need to fight, even when theyāre facing the other first-class-examinees who are using much flashier magic. Frieren even tells Fern not to bother with other types of offensive magic, that Zoltraak is āenough to defeat mages of this eraā. Frieren is only ever shown to be interested in assorted folk magic with no fighting utility: growing flowers, making tea, cleaning statues. Even her confrontation against Aura - the biggest show of her power up until now - is just about displaying how much mana she has rather than her actually using it.
Sure, logically you know Frieren is powerful, but itās easy to get lulled into this sense that sheās just somewhat more powerful than everyone else. Even her Zoltraak casts up to this point seem to be more in the realm of slightly-stronger-than-average than anything truly mind-blowing. Hell, I can understand why Denken saw her and thought he had a chance at taking her on one on one if conditions were right.
And then. Oh my god.
Zoltraak is enough to defeat mages of this era. But Frieren is not a mage of this era.
Just like. Holy crap. The payoff of a full season emphasizing that Frieren never bothers using anything but the most basic offensive spells because nothing in the world is dangerous enough for her to need it -> her facing her replica and them both immediately launching into NIGHTMARE LIGHTNING HELL FIRE REALITY SHATTERING BLACK HOLE. Frieren herself is the only thing we've seen so far that is dangerous enough to require this kind of attack. She is terrifying. Ms Frieren I will never doubt you again.

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No, my dear anime only watcher, I will not give you context for this manga panel.
if you are lucky you will love someone and their hair will thin and their breasts will sag and you will kiss them everywhere over and over again
I was having a conversation with someone who was lamenting over how to maintain attraction to our partners as their bodies change and age and feeling self conscious herself about that process and I was like. we should be so lucky as to see them through these many years as we are seen ourselves. Hope that helps u understand
reminds me of this quote i love
Glasses // Jonathan Coulton
I just love how in Frieren the spell that created a field of flowers was the catalyst that led to the demon king's defeat. It's not a holy sword, a party of super strong members, but this spell that Frieren learned from her master, showed to a young himmel in a small act of kindness led to such a wonderful thing. The demon king was not defeated through spite, but through that single act of small kindness that started it all. ALL BECAUSE OF A SPELL THAT CREATES A FIELD OF FLOWERS THAT THE WORLD WAS SAVED
This .
Fun little thing about medieval medicine.
So thereās this old German remedy for getting rid of boils. A mix of eggshells, egg whites, and sulfur rubbed into the boil while reciting the incantation and saying five Paternosters. And according to my profās friend (a doctor), itās all very sensible. The eggshells abrade the skin so the sulfur can sink in and fry the boil. The egg white forms a flexible protective barrier. The incantation and prayers are important because you need to rub it in for a certain amount of time.
Itās easy to take the magic words as superstition, but theyāre important.
The length of time it takes to say a paternoster was a typical method of reckoning time in the Middle Ages. Itās likely that whoever wrote this remedy down was thinking of it both as a prayer and a timespan and that whoever read it would have understood it the same way.
I wonder if this shows up in other historical areas besides medicine?
I ask because I have a very Italian, very Catholic friend who was once describing how she makes pizzelles. Theyāre cooked in a specific press, similar to a waffle iron, long enough to get light and crispy but not burnt, and in her own words: āI donāt know the exact time it takes to cook them in seconds, but I usually do either two Hail Maryās or an Our Father and a Glory Be.ā
I would be extremely surprised if medieval people didnāt use prayers while cooking. You donāt want to roast an egg for too long, have it explode, and get hot yolk in your eye. :PĀ
I know that church bells were definitely used as timekeepers.Ā
Before oven thermometers existed, one way to check the temperature of your oven was to stick your hand inside and recite an Our Father. The length of time before you snatch your hand out was timed by how far youād gotten in the prayer. The shorter the time, the hotter the oven. So you knew that if you wanted a hot oven to bake bread, you wanted your hand out by ākingdomā (for example) but to slow cook a stew, you might want the oven cool enough to get to ātrespassesā.
This popped up in āNanny Oggās Cookbookā as well, though there the timing method wasnāt prayer but X verses of āWhere Has All The Custard Gone?ā
Other timing methods are āa whileā (approx. 35 mins) and āa good whileā (variable, up to 10 years, which the book suggests is a bit long to let batter rest before making pancakesā¦)
All absolutely standard, and also varied from region to region. The use of prayer was more common than most, since the Catholic church had a monopoly on⦠well, pretty much everything. And all the prayers were in Latin, and at a specific cadence, so the effect is similar to watching the second hand on a clock today.
itās important to note that to the medieval people the prayers were important because of timekeeping AND god. like, i think as modern people we do tend to want it to be ājust timekeeping, they werenāt just superstitious idiots, they had a good reasonable scientific reason!ā but itās also important to remember just how culturally steeped in a mystical religion they were, a relationship with christianity entirely unlike the modern relationship found in modern american culture even amongst the most religious people. i have no doubt that in the medieval mind, they were aware of the prayer being the time it took but also if there had BEEN another way to measure that time, the prayer would have been held to be preferable and important in its own right because of the importance of spiritual assistance in worldly things like bread-baking
Definitely, this is a great point! I was talking to somebody in the comments who was saying that medieval medicine was mostly bunkum because it involves spirituality, supposedly meaning it couldnāt also have logical basis behind it. But thatās a really modern way to see it. To the medieval worldview, those things arenāt contradictory. Theyāre part of each other. Think about how many medieval Christian scientists were monks, nuns, and priests.
*INHUMAN SCREECHING*
M YĀ Ā T I M EĀ Ā H A SĀ Ā C O M E
You guys donāt understand how excited it made me to read this post, I literally wrote my masterās thesis on this exact topic.
STORY TIME
Sometime in the 10th century in Anglo-Saxon England (for context, this is before the Norman Conquest and near-ish to the reign of Alfred the Great), a dude named Bald asked another dude name Cild to write a book. Not just any book. A leechbook, which was essentially the medieval version of WebMD for practicing doctors. BUT NOT JUST A LEECHBOOK. This leechbook was gonna be the damnĀ LamborghiniĀ of leechbooks. This thing was going to be split into two parts, the first dealing with external medicine and the second dealing with internal medicineāsomething that was unheard of at the time. It was going to be organized (head to toe, like all the good leechbooks were). It was gonna be nice (leather and vellum). It was gonna use all the best ideas (from all over the known world).Ā And the whole thing was going to be written in Anglo-Saxon. Now, a few medical books had been compiled in Anglo-Saxon before, but none like this. This one was going to be EPIC. And it wasāand still is.
Baldās Leechbook (also goes by the more boring but more informative MS Royal 12 D XVIII over in the British Library) contains a lot of medical remedies. A lot of them rely on things like prayers and chants and odd charms, like one for a headache, which recommends plucking the eyes off a living crab, letting the crab back into the water, and wearing the eyes about your neck in a little sack until you feel better. However, itās worth pointing out that the really wild remedies, the stuff that makes absolutely no freakinā sense, is most often recommended to treat ailments that are hard to treat even todayāmigraines, toothaches, cancer. These things are really painful or deadly and, without modern medicine, almost impossible to treat. So are you going to make up some nonsense to make your client at least feel like theyāre doing something, and hey, if it sort of works, it works? Of course you are. You want to help people. Even if it sounds crazy, what else are you going to do? You have to try something, and the people who are suffering are willing to try anything.
But thereās also things that make complete sense. To echo concepts that have been mentioned by commentators above, there is a recipe that calls for the recitation of the paternoster while boiling a honey-based salve meant to treat carbuncle. The book instructs the physician to bring it to a boil, and sing the paternoster three times, and remove it from the fire, and sing nine paternosters, and to repeat this process two more times. A century ago, historians read the use of the paternoster as a magical incantation, but today, most agree that in lieu of a stopwatch, the paternoster is just meant to make sure you donāt burn the honey.
BUT THAT ISNāT NEAR THE COOLEST THING.
Now, this book was compiled by a master physician (we donāt know if it was Cild himself or if Cild was the scribe for an unnamed author) who was compiling recipes that had been written down for some time, and had, as many things do, gone through various permutations over the years. Many came from Greece or the western Mediterranean, and had been adapted for local English horticulture and herbs. Some came from around what is now Germany, and some ideas came from farther away in the Middle East (King Alfred was a sickly king; some scholars believe that he had his physicians seek out cures from all over the world in an attempt to treat himself). But there is one recipe that has only ever been identified in England. Not only has this recipe only ever been identified in England, itās only ever been identified in this one manuscript. When translated into modern English, it reads as follows:
Work an eyesalve for a wen [stye], take cropleek and garlic, of both equal quantities, pound them well together, take wine and bullocks gall, of both equal quantities, mix with the leek, put this then into a brazen vessel, let it stand nine days in the brass vessel, wring out through a cloth and clear it well, put it into a horn, and about night time, apply it with a feather to the eye; the best leechdom.
For those who donāt know and/or are lucky enough to have never had one, a āwenā or a stye is a bacterial infection that manifests like a boil or a cyst that on the eyelid. They hurt something awful, and can cause larger infections of the eye. They are usually caused byĀ StaphylococcusĀ aureus.Ā
With me? Okay. Fast-forward to 1988. A former biologist turned historian called M.L. Cameron decides to take a look at this old medical leechbook to see what he can see. He takes a good look and saysĀ āLads I do believe these Anglo-Saxon leeches werenāt nearly so daft as we thought they wereā (he did not and probably would never actually say that, Iām paraphrasing). Cameron was particularly interested in the recipe above. As a scientist, he knew a few things:
Garlic and cropleek (leek or onion, or another related plant) have been known to have antibacterial qualities for centuries.
Wine (alcohol) also has antibacterial qualities.
Bullocks gall (literally bile taken from a bull) is known to have detergent properties, and has long been used as an additive to soap for particularly tough stains.
A brazen vessel, or a vessel made of brass, contains a good amount of copper in it. And that copper, when left to sit around for, I donāt know, about nine days, would have plenty of time to react with the acids in the onion and garlic and the tartarates in the wine to create copper salts.Ā
Coppers salts, as it happens, are cytotoxic, meaning they kill everything: tissue and bacteria.
What an interesting find.
Fast-forward again toĀ 2015. A paper is published by a team from the University of Nottingham, whoāve been working on anĀ āAncientbioticsā project to investigate ancient medical remedies and see if they actually work. Theyāve turned their sights to the Anglo-Saxons, and are, as was Cameron, particularly interested in this recipe for an eye salve. Without boring you with the finer details of the experiment and its various trials (read it yourself!) I will spoil the ending by telling you that they discovered a few things:
This recipe, which was over 1,000 years old when they tested it, worked.
It worked well.
It workedĀ extremely well.Ā
So well, in fact, that (in a lab setting) they even got it to kill Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or as itās more commonly known, MRSA. MRSA is a modern superbug that has built up a resistance to the antibiotic Methicillin. And this goddamn Anglo-Saxon witchesā brew freakin murdered it.
Now, as an advocate for modern medicine and sound scientific method, Iām not about to say that we should go throwing this salve on everything in 2019, because it is, if anything, just a starting point for modern scientists. This salve is still incredibly crude by modern standards and comes with a lot of potential problems. But as a historian⦠it works, you guys, it really works.
Medieval physicians were not idiots. They believed in magic, they believed in all things supernatural, they believed in all those things that are āunreasonableā or unpopular today, and they practiced them too. But they also interacted with the real world with brains and intellects as sharp if not sharper than yours and mine. They were smart, they studied, they talked to each other in Latin and Greek and Arabic and Anglo Saxon. They made old recipes better and came up with brand new ones. They tried dumb stuff and they tried smart stuff. They didnāt have access to even the smallest fraction of the information we have at our fingertips today, and yet they created things like this.Ā
To this day, no one knows who created the eyesalve recipe. And no one truly understands why this is the only copy of it. If it worked so well, why isnāt it plastered to the headings of every medical textbook from Alfred to Victoria? Speaking personally, I would argue that it has to do with language. Not so long after Baldās Leechbook was written, the French invaded England and took over. Latin and French became the language of the court, and while Anglo-Saxon lived on throughout the country, and certainly lay doctors would have used Anglo-Saxon books daily, the language of formal English medical education was Latin. Oxford and Cambridge were late to the medical ed game after Salerno, Bologna, Paris, and Montpellier, and naturally fell in step with continental schools as a result, using Latin almost exclusively, and sometimes Greek or Arabic.Ā
Point being, by the time medical licenses and medical college degrees are a thing in England, not only does almost no one of university-eligible class speak Anglo-Saxon anymore, no one has use for those Old English texts, because they donāt get you your degree, and you canāt make a living as a doctor without a degree and doctorās license. And no oneās going to translate an old Anglo Saxon text into Latin when Avicennaās newest old hit, now in Latin, is fresh off the boat from France.
All that to say:Ā NeverĀ write something off because itās old. 1,000 years is a long time ago, but human ingenuity and intelligence are hardly modern inventions. The science of the world hasnāt changed; only our tools and our perspective.
Thanks for coming to my TED talk
Further reading:
The 2015 Ancientbiotics report:Ā A 1,000-Year-Old Antimicrobial Remedy with Antistaphylococcal Activity
NPR: āAncientbioticsā Researchers Look For Old Fixes To Modern Ailments
Mental Floss: 20 Anglo-Saxon Remedies from Baldās Leechbook
Read a paper about how scholars are building on the work of the Ancientbiotics project to better understand how to apply ancient ideas effectively to modern medicine.
Look through Royal 12 D XVIII for yourself! Baldās eyesalve recipe is on f. 12v and looks like this:
This is a long post, so if anyone wants a TL;DR I got one:
People used prayers to keep time because they didnāt have clocks or watches
People also believed they were getting help from god or spirits at the same time
There is an old medieval recipe for an eye salve that can kill MRSA
This recipe was forgotten because it was written in Old English just prior to France taking over and teaching everyone French and Latin
There are a lot of really dog shit things in the world of tech that can be solved with a bit of time, some stubborn googling and maybe some special hardware and piracy is only the tip of the iceberg.Ā
Printers are notorious for claiming theyāre out of ink when they havenāt come close to the suggested number of prints, and their cartridges literally still have ink in them. So after a bit of googling I found out how toĀ āresetā a cartridges automatic stopping system (its literally 1 physical wheel on the cartridge that you gotta turn back). The only downside is that I donāt get a digital ink monitor, but since it told me it was empty when still half full, I donāt mind.Ā
Like, you can just jiggle with some shit and solve one of the biggest money making scams in the post-industrial world and I donāt think people realise its that easy.Ā
Or, like, repairing your own technology. A few months ago, I swapped out my sisterās laptop screen. Did it myself, I removed maybe 4 screws, no vital parts were exposed and it cost me $40. I even got a choice of matte or glossy.Ā
My point is, any walls that capitalist technology presents you with will be a false one. And one already broken by a dedicated community of interesting people working hard for free to break down that wall.
kids these days will be all ābe gay do crimeā and dont even know how to watch a cartoon without paying for it smh
IN FAIRNESS
piracy was definitely leagues easier a decade or so ago when thepiratebay was functional, megaupload was still running, and YouTube and Google made only the most cursory attempts to block copyright content. like letās not pretend that the internet hasnāt got a lot more corporatised in the past decade or so. piracy is still possible and you can and should do it but itās a LOT harder to do safely and reliably than it was.
^thank u
Sorry, this is all wrong.
1) ThePirateBay is still functional. (Itās not the same pirate bay that it was back in the day, but letās not get into Theseusā ship territory. Itās still here and it still works, thatās all that matters.) There are plenty of torrent sites around, more than there were 10 years ago ā although overall traffic has plummeted. Now as then, itās a whack-a-mole game.
2) Why was it āleagues easierā a decade ago? Some countries, not all (not north America, for example), now mandate ISP blocking of torrent sites, but this new complication can be bypassed with one (1) step: a google duckduckgo search for proxies. No government agency or ISP can possibly keep up with proxies, itās yet another whack-a-mole game. So yes, it was technically easier before, but I donāt see āleaguesā anywhere.
3) It was safer before? Are you shitting me? Have you lot forgotten that the legal departments of MPAA and RIAA sued torrent sharers (not even uploaders) and asked for millions of dollars for damages? AND GOT THEM? (By which I mean they didnāt actually get millions since the people they sued didnāt have any, but said people were convicted and ruined and that was the goal in the first place. It was a deeply amoral and cynical scare tactic.) Well they stopped doing that at some point, and focused on hunting P2P and torrent sites. Running a site is certainly less safe today. Using one, though? Depending on where you are, the ISP may be allowed to block you after repeated instances, and thatās it. Youāre not getting in trouble with the law or into crippling debt. And either way thereās only a minuscule chance that any of this will come to pass, which becomes zero (0) with a VPN. (Safety of course depends on the country, and in some cases piracy is the least of your concerns. Letās not get into that.)
4) Ten years ago there was no Sci-Hub, and Library Genesis was in its infancy. If today itās harder to find PDFs on google, it is orders of magnitude easier and more reliable to find them elsewhere. People just have to unstick their minds from the notion that stuff is either on google or doesnāt exist at all. Geez.
5) P2P still exists. IRC (the sharing channels in particular, #bookz and the like) still exists. Torrenting functions like it always did. All these methods are exactly as easy to use as before, i.e. not necessarily a piece of cake, thereās a learning curve. But itās the same learning curve it was 10 years ago.
6) So what have we lost? Only YouTube (meh, the film/tv quality was appalling anyway, and music is still there) and direct downloads (at least the permanent ones: there are plenty of them still around, but files expire and you need to keep track of what goes up when. So this goes beyond knowhow, itās about internet communities. Letās not get into that either, itās a huge subject.) Itās a loss, sure, but I wouldnāt call it a terrible blow.
7) And in exchange for that loss, we got streaming sites. This is piracy, too, and itās much much easier than torrents, and tons of people do it. Any āpiracy has declinedā narrative either implies that weāre excluding streaming from the discussion for some reason, or is flat out wrong. Ten years ago, grandpa couldnāt possibly torrent a film, and itās debatable if he even knew how to open the file you helpfully sent him. Now, as long as someone has set up kodi or similar, grandpa can watch it on his tv and it just feels like cable.
8) On why torrents in particular have declined in recent years, see here. Itās a big subject and I didnāt cover all of it, but the main reason is that people had access to easier methods to get what they wanted (some legal and affordable, some illegal and free), so they didnāt need to learn how to torrent. Ergo, they never did. Thereās more of course, and thereās definitely a cultural shift too, but thatās a very long story so letās not get into it. The linked post also includes some thoughts on why torrents arenāt dead and doomed just yet, and ooh, I forgot a very important one: you canāt stream photoshop.
To summarise, internet piracy is NOT more difficult, unreliable, and unsafe today than it was 10 or 20 years ago. For reasons why people (young or otherwise) seem less versed in it, please look elsewhere. I have thoughts on that too, but this is already a very long post, so Iāll just leave you with the best kind of thought. Iāll leave you with a doubt:
ARE people less versed in piracy? Are they really? Or is it simply that 20 years ago, internet users were computer geeks by definition, whereas now everyoneās online? Perhaps the percentage of skilled pirates in the general population remains more or less the same, and the only thing thatās dropped is the percentage of skilled pirates to total internet users. I canāt be sure without statistical evidence, but itās a possibility.
You can literally google āwatch _____ free onlineā and find most movies but the third result just download Adblock or popup blocker and youāre golden it truly couldnāt be easier
Iāve been meaning to make a piracy masterpost for awhile and what better time than now?
Materpost: A curated Githup tutorial of links to more torrent sites, software, VPNs, uBlock origin filters, ect. Basically everything you could ever want starting out. Do be warned though it doesnāt appear to have been updated in awhile so a few of the links are dead.
GAMES:
Vimmās Roms: NES era->ps3 era roms and emulators to play them. Has user ratings on games. Cons: slow download speeds.
NxBrew: Switch roms/game updates/dlc
nsw2u: More switch roms. Check here if nxbrew doesnāt have the game youāre looking for.
Hshop: 3ds games/updates/dlc. Very well organized and sorted by console region. Bonus ability to generate QR codes to scan with homebrew to begin download directly on your console.
Oldgamesdownload: Old 90ās-2000ās PC games and some gamecube games. Technically, all of the games here are abandon ware, meaning the original company/creator doesnāt sell nor make money from the games anymore period. If youāre into that.
Fitgirl repacks: Heavily compressed PC games, and other various consoles. Small downloads and faster speeds for the size of the games. Somewhat limited game selection.
Steam unlocked: Steam games with easy-to-use installers. Check here if fitgirl doesnāt have what youāre looking for.
Steam Underground: A user forum for piracy support, usually about installing cracked games. Does have some scattered PC game downloads.
Google doc of Skyrim SE creation club content.
Amiibo life: Amiibo bins, can be loaded with some homebrew to load in games without any external source, or, if you buy writable NFC cards, you can make your own free amiibos.
Books:
Library Genesis: a good all-in-one ebook finder. Has books, magazines, scientific papers, ect. Well organized and able to sort by Author, Genre, ect ect. Almost all books in .epub format
Calibre: Not piracy but a free software for reading said .epub files, and other ebook formats. Good for sorting your books.
Sci-Hub: Research papers, academic books, pdfs, ect. Helpful for collage students.
IT ebook: eBooks about learning programming languages.
audiobookbay: Audiobook downloads.
Booksonic: Audiobook streaming.
5e.tools: Dnd playerās manual, guide, ect.
Books on learning various languages.
Mangadex: Manga, Doujinshi. Ā Ā Ā
Headspace sleep audio.
Various books and manuals.
Streaming:
ustvgo: Free streaming of live tv, has most US cable tv channels.
tutturu: Spiritual successor to Rabbit, allows you to stream your screen with friends.
Yes movies: Movies
Kimcartoon: Cartoons/animated movies
aniwatcher: Anime
animedao: Anime
Computer software:
getintopc: Wide selection of pc (mostly windows) software of all sorts, and different versions. Can personally vouch for the site, Iāve gotten Photoshop, Maya, and Sony Vegas from here over the years.
Other:
the eye: An archive of old roms, OS systems, roms (non nintendo), comics, books, ect, ect. Cons: No search function and slightly hard to navigate.
1337x.to: Torrent site for movies, shows, games, comics, ect.
ThePirateBay: The classic.
Recorded broadway musicals. Verying quality.

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Internet was not interneting throughout the day so i did a little work i n progress sketch of a family portrait
Craving a good sesskag family with a child involved fic or a wholesome family kind of manhwa right now
This is everything!!!!šāŗļøš
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byGosh: Find free illustrated childrenās books and stories here.
Munseys: Munseys has nearly 2,000 childrenās titles, plus books about religion, biographies and more.
International Childrenās Digital Library: Find award-winning books and search by categories like age group, make believe books, true books or picture books.
Lookybook: Access childrenās picture books here.
PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Bored.com: Bored.com has music ebooks, cooking ebooks, and over 150 philosophy titles and over 1,000 religion titles.
Ideology.us: Here youāll find works by Rene Descartes, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, David Hume and others.
Free Books on Yoga, Religion and Philosophy: Recent uploads to this site include Practical Lessons in Yoga and Philosophy of Dreams.
The Sociology of Religion: Read this book by Max Weber, here.
Religion eBooks: Read books about the Bible, Christian books, and more.
PLAYS
ReadBookOnline.net: Here you can read plays by Chekhov, Thomas Hardy, Ben Jonson, Shakespeare, Edgar Allan Poe and others.
Plays: Read Pygmalion, Uncle Vanya or The Playboy of the Western World here.
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare: MIT has made available all of Shakespeareās comedies, tragedies, and histories.
Plays Online: This site catalogs āall the plays [they] know about that are available in full text versions online for free.ā
ProPlay: This site has childrenās plays, comedies, dramas and musicals.
MODERN FICTION, FANTASY AND ROMANCE
Public Bookshelf: Find romance novels, mysteries and more.
The Internet Book Database of Fiction: This forum features fantasy and graphic novels, anime, J.K. Rowling and more.
Free Online Novels: Here you can find Christian novels, fantasy and graphic novels, adventure books, horror books and more.
Foxglove: This British site has free novels, satire and short stories.
Baen Free Library: Find books by Scott Gier, Keith Laumer and others.
The Road to Romance: This website has books by Patricia Cornwell and other romance novelists.
Get Free Ebooks: This siteās largest collection includes fiction books.
John T. Cullen: Read short stories from John T. Cullen here.
SF and Fantasy Books Online: Books here include Arabian Nights,Aesopās Fables and more.
Free Novels Online and Free Online Cyber-Books: This list contains mostly fantasy books.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
Project Laurens Jz Coster: Find Dutch literature here.
ATHENA Textes Francais: Search by authorās name, French books, or books written by other authors but translated into French.
Liber Liber: Download Italian books here. Browse by author, title, or subject.
Biblioteca romaneasca: Find Romanian books on this site.
Bibliolteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes: Look up authors to find a catalog of their available works on this Spanish site.
KEIMENA: This page is entirely in Greek, but if youāre looking for modern Greek literature, this is the place to access books online.
Proyecto Cervantes: Texas A&Mās Proyecto Cervantes has cataloged Cervantesā work online.
Corpus Scriptorum Latinorum: Access many Latin texts here.
Project Runeberg: Find Scandinavian literature online here.
Italian Women Writers: This site provides information about Italian women authors and features full-text titles too.
Biblioteca Valenciana: Register to use this database of Catalan and Valencian books.
Ketab Farsi: Access literature and publications in Farsi from this site.
Afghanistan Digital Library: Powered by NYU, the Afghanistan Digital Library has works published between 1870 and 1930.
CELT: CELT stands for āthe Corpus of Electronic Textsā features important historical literature and documents.
Projekt Gutenberg-DE: This easy-to-use database of German language texts lets you search by genres and author.
HISTORY AND CULTURE
LibriVox: LibriVox has a good selection of historical fiction.
The Perseus Project: Tuftsā Perseus Digital Library features titles from Ancient Rome and Greece, published in English and original languages.
Access Genealogy: Find literature about Native American history, the Scotch-Irish immigration in the 19th and 20th centuries, and more.
Free History Books: This collection features U.S. history books, including works by Paul Jennings, Sarah Morgan Dawson, Josiah Quincy and others.
Most Popular History Books: Free titles include Seven Days and Seven Nights by Alexander Szegedy and Autobiography of a Female Slave by Martha G. Browne.
RARE BOOKS
Questia: Questia has 5,000 books available for free, including rare books and classics.
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT
Books-On-Line: This large collection includes movie scripts, newer works, cookbooks and more.
Chest of Books: This site has a wide range of free books, including gardening and cooking books, home improvement books, craft and hobby books, art books and more.
Free e-Books: Find titles related to beauty and fashion, games, health, drama and more.
2020ok: Categories here include art, graphic design, performing arts, ethnic and national, careers, business and a lot more.
Free Art Books: Find artist books and art books in PDF format here.
Free Web design books: OnlineComputerBooks.com directs you to free web design books.
Free Music Books: Find sheet music, lyrics and books about music here.
Free Fashion Books: Costume and fashion books are linked to the Google Books page.
MYSTERY
MysteryNet: Read free short mystery stories on this site.
TopMystery.com: Read books by Edgar Allan Poe, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, GK Chesterton and other mystery writers here.
Mystery Books: Read books by Sue Grafton and others.
POETRY
The Literature Network: This site features forums, a copy of The King James Bible, and over 3,000 short stories and poems.
Poetry: This list includes āThe Raven,ā āO Captain! My Captain!ā and āThe Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde.ā
Poem Hunter: Find free poems, lyrics and quotations on this site.
Famous Poetry Online: Read limericks, love poetry, and poems by Robert Browning, Emily Dickinson, John Donne, Lord Byron and others.
Google Poetry: Google Books has a large selection of poetry, fromThe Canterbury Tales to Beowulf to Walt Whitman.
QuotesandPoem.com: Read poems by Maya Angelou, William Blake, Sylvia Plath and more.
CompleteClassics.com: Rudyard Kipling, Allen Ginsberg and Alfred Lord Tennyson are all featured here.
PinkPoem.com: On this site, you can download free poetry ebooks.
MISC
Banned Books: Here you can follow links of banned books to their full text online.
World eBook Library: This monstrous collection includes classics, encyclopedias, childrenās books and a lot more.
DailyLit: DailyLit has everything from Moby Dick to the recent phenomenon, Skinny Bitch.
A Celebration of Women Writers: The University of Pennsylvaniaās page for women writers includes Newbery winners.
Free Online Novels: These novels are fully online and range from romance to religious fiction to historical fiction.
ManyBooks.net: Download mysteries and other books for your iPhone or eBook reader here.
Authorama: Books here are pulled from Google Books and more. Youāll find history books, novels and more.
Prize-winning books online: Use this directory to connect to full-text copies of Newbery winners, Nobel Prize winners and Pulitzer winners.
⦠and here is a gift for all of us.
Please check you library first though! They get money based on check-outs so try there FIRST (even academic works!)
I compiled this a while ago but I was just looking for references and found the file so...
Best places to find reference photos:
Body types, poses, and anatomy:
http://reference.sketchdaily.net/en
https://www.posemaniacs.com/
https://quickposes.com/en
https://www.characterdesigns.com/#home-section
https://www.adorkastock.com/sketch/
https://line-of-action.com/practice-tools/figure-drawing/
https://www.proko.com/browse/tools?af=242
Giant anatomy reference tutorials Pinterest board:
https://www.pinterest.com/deedee1232/body-reference/
General:
https://unsplash.com/
https://pixabay.com/
https://www.pexels.com/
https://stocksnap.io/
https://www.freeimages.com/
https://kaboompics.com/
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
https://morguefile.com/
https://www.flickr.com/
https://www.dreamstime.com/
https://pmp-art.com/
https://www.freepik.com/
https://photobash.co/
https://picjumbo.com/
https://burst.shopify.com/
https://magdeleine.co/
https://wordpress.org/openverse/
Historical:
https://nos.twnsnd.co/
Her...š¹

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Art by @sayuri-watanabe for chapter 22 of āFirst Comes Marriageā.
This fic is one of the harder ones I have written because of the things Kagome had gone through, but we have finally reached a place where they both can be happy together š„³š„³š„³ I wanted to celebrate this milestone with a beautiful art.
Sayuri ā Amazing art as always!! You totally nailed their soft and loving expressions, they brought tears to my eyes!! ā¤ļøā¤ļøā¤ļø
** Permission to post it was granted by the artist Do not repost/edit the art without permission Please, support the artist on their page too **
Artist : åŖęę³¢ē¾
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