I... can't stop... i HAVE to draw all the characters with pokemons now aaaaaa.....

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I... can't stop... i HAVE to draw all the characters with pokemons now aaaaaa.....

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.
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Drick and the gang.
(These characters are like... my oldest ocs so it's always nice to update their designs in small ways)
Draby noworoczne, new year’s carolers from south-eastern Poland.
Source: muzeumetnograficzne.rzeszow.pl
Draby noworoczne, new year’s carolers from Urzejowice in south-eastern Poland.
Source: muzeumetnograficzne.rzeszow.pl
Draby noworoczne, new year’s carolers from Urzejowice in south-eastern Poland.
Source:Â muzeumetnograficzne.rzeszow.pl

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
Draby noworoczne, new year’s carolers from Urzejowice in south-eastern Poland.
Source: muzeumetnograficzne.rzeszow.pl
Kolędnicy in Poland: ‘Droby’ from Olszyny.
Remnants of the old tradition of kolędowanie (see: Koliada - Slavic caroling) can be still seen nowadays in Poland. The ‘season’ of kolędowanie starts after Christmas and lasts throughout the carnival season (zapusty) up until February, or even longer in some of the regions. This custom is rooted in old-Slavic festivities celebrating the days growing longer after a birth of a ‘New Sun’ on the winter solstice, and includes many pre-Christian rites that were meant to evoke the nature’s fertility for the upcoming spring. There are numerous regional names for the groups of the ‘carolers’, coming with various regional costumes. Costumes like those of ‘Droby’ seen above were meant to symbolize ancestors arriving for the rite.
Source of pictures:Â rzepiennik.info
You can see more examples of various costumes related to that custom under my tag ‘kolędowanie’.
Kolędnicy in Poland: ‘Droby’ from Olszyny.
Remnants of the old tradition of kolędowanie (see: Koliada - Slavic caroling) can be still seen nowadays in Poland. The ‘season’ of kolędowanie starts after Christmas and lasts throughout the carnival season (zapusty) up until February, or even longer in some of the regions. This custom is rooted in old-Slavic festivities celebrating the days growing longer after a birth of a ‘New Sun’ on the winter solstice, and includes many pre-Christian rites that were meant to evoke the nature’s fertility for the upcoming spring. There are numerous regional names for the groups of the ‘carolers’, coming with various regional costumes. Costumes like those of ‘Droby’ seen above were meant to symbolize ancestors arriving for the rite.
Source of pictures: rzepiennik.info
You can see more examples of various costumes related to that custom under my tag ‘kolędowanie’.