Updated Haladroth refsheet along with Villosk, his second-in-command, court sorcerer, ritual master, and sassy wizard rolled into one.
While Villosk definitely fits the bill of a traitorous right hand man, he has no real intention of betraying Haladroth. After around 2,000 years of being at Haladroth’s side and relying on him to maintain a comfy lifestyle, Villosk would rather not risk it all for a power grab. Still, he never stops being exasperated and annoyed with his lord’s impulsive desires and indulgences, but not enough to raise a hand against him.
details of the Ishtar Gate, c. 575 BCE, Babylon, present day Iraq
housed in Pergamon Museum, Berlin
This isn't really a question but more of a funny thought I had about the iron lords and a meme. The meme is called 'Who broke It', and I just couldn't stop thinking about Timur being the one who was asking who broke it and then the rest of the iron lords blaming each other and fighting so I thought I'd share the funny thought lol
YOU'RE SO RIGHT about Timur alskdjhfkslahf 😂 He's certainly the one breaking the poor coffee machine himself just for fun. Pretty sure Colovance will be the one to immediately say he broke just to avoid the scandal and then will offer to fix it; and Timur will have to make him sit back down forcibly like 5 times throughout the whole conversation. Radegast (secretly afraid that he DID break it because he sometimes punches it uuh accidently, but won't admit it) will of course try to blame Felwinter, only for Felwinter to coolly remind everyone that he doesn't drink coffee at all ("Oh you didn't make it for yourself alright, it's for your little brat!.."). Saladin will of course support Radegast, and then Jolder will blame Saladin himself just to mess with him. And Gheleon will straight up say it was Timur who broke it, but everyone will think he's joking askldhflsadh
You're right, it's very funny to think about, thank you 😂💙
(Have a tiny Radegast enjoying his marshmallow coffee from my scribblebook, it seemed fitting)
patch?
Terracotta vase in the form of a lobster claw, Greece, circa 460 BC
from The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Ancient Necklace with Mosaic Glass Beads, from the Eastern Mediterranean, c.100 BCE-100 CE: this necklace is composed of 30 glass beads, most of which are decorated with stylized faces
From the John Paul Getty Museum:
The beads are made of multi-colored opaque glass and are decorated with heads and floral designs. The necklace is in good condition; some beads are chipped or cracked.
The exact origin of this piece is unknown, but it can be traced back to the Eastern Mediterranean, where it was likely made by a Greek or Roman artist.
Each bead has a width of about 1.2cm (roughly half an inch); they're decorated with remarkably intricate details, and each face is depicted in its own unique style.
Sources & More Info:
John Paul Getty Museum: Necklace with Mosaic Glass Beads
Drawover Mucha. Again. I saw this piece and was like, this is Riyo and Fox. And then I got carried away.
@eobe @eclec-tech @lonewolflupe @ghostymarni
Wanted to make another one of my ‘hydrozoan city’ leviathans (after fighting the divine beast in elden ring).
I imagine this one is much older and therefore has more conjoining colonies piloted by several ‘crowns’ (a term I made up for the piloting creatures in the head section) as well as far more complicated mimicry. Him big.
I feel like I should make a little info post showing its individual crown critters when they aren’t fused together? Idk