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@99aceace

Ace | [They/them]| currently star wars obsessed | afraid of people
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Anonymous asked:

I literally found you and your art 3 minutes ago and I am ready to explode, it's so good and making bad batch x slavic culture crossovers? Magnificient, world-stopping, breathtaking.

I do have an idea for a piece of art if you are interested?

Clone troopers dancing belgijka and just having fun like kids during bal gimnazjalny haha or if you want something more traditional, maybe polonez? Or even clones pairing up with their jedi generals for a dance? Or even folk dance?

I am so glad I found your account!

Thank you for your kind words!

The prompts sounds interesting! Especially a bit of clones and Jedi dancing Polonaise because that would imply the Republic has a space!Studniówka (thus by extension... also a space!Matura exam)!

I can't promise you anything, but I'll have that prompt at the back of my mind and maybe one day if I have good enough idea I'll draw it.

In the meantime...

... have Wrecker and Crosshair eat pierogi!

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STAR WARS: The Clone Wars/The Bad Batch © George Lucas/ Dave Filoni/ LucasFilm/ Disney

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Just a little doodle of my OCs Crisis and Nyali when Nyali is all grown up. (The Aurebesh says, “Taller than Dad!!”)

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Shower Day! Time to get clean

Station showers are not the most glorious things, but it’s better than stinking for weeks on end.

fuck an "intended audience" how about we normalize engaging with new and unfamiliar art pieces on their own terms

ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the difference between pushing a product and creating a work of art

I can't be bothered to find the thread rn. But there were a bunch of people talking about it, and I agree, so I'm sharing the idea here:

We need a death of the audience; lots of media gets worse because authors are too worried about a hypothetical audience. As someone engaging with media, you need to understand that you simply might not understand all of it, and that's ok. But also I think more authors need to realize that it's ok if not everyone in the audience will fully understand everything they're doing.

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Okay, but here’s why the next Tales of being about Ventress and Cad Bane makes me a little more hopeful that we’re getting a long form series announcement at Celebration (and hopefully a long form series centering on Rex and Echo in the early imperial era where Tech can come back):

One, it means they’re probably announcing something other than Tales of at Celebration itself. Hopefully another long-form series.

Second…I was actually kind of hoping that if we get a Tech return, it isn’t in a tales of anthology. The thing about Tales of is that it’s largely for stuff that wasn’t originally planned when the various writers were writing the larger story arcs. It’s mostly them having an idea either for background stories for characters who are tied up in more linear narratives in a way that makes it difficult to visit those background pieces (Ahsoka), or character who were killed off or disappeared a while ago and focus on whom doesn’t necessarily fit into that more linear narrative but would definitely enhance it. So, bits and pieces of Ahsoka’s life we won’t be visiting in any of the present day stuff, Dooku backstory, what happened to Barriss, Morgan Elsbeth, etc.

And the thing is, I’ll take a Tech return in a tales of anthology is that’s all I can get, but I would still be annoyed about it. Because that would mean the writers really did just throw him off a train without thinking about it or how to handle it, and I feel like a planned return as part of a more linear story is too well foreshadowed and set up.

So even though I’m not pinning my expectations on an announcement for a longform series set on the heels of The Bad Batch (and I’m definitely not expecting any confirmation on Tech, even if I would like that), I am a little hopeful for it.

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Reblogged lornaka

Where's that Vincent van Gogh quote

"Many people seem to think it foolish, even superstitious, to believe that the world could still change for the better. And it is true that in winter it is sometimes so bitingly cold that one is tempted to say, ‘What do I care if there is a summer; its warmth is no help to me now.’ Yes, evil often seems to surpass good. But then, in spite of us, and without our permission, there comes at last an end to the bitter frosts. One morning the wind turns, and there is a thaw. And so I must still have hope."
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