Jump to content

Leaderboard

Popular Content

Showing most liked content on 11/17/21 in all areas

  1. Aight. I can do that, unless you wanna work on it together :pp Oh yeah, and here’s a sketch. I still don’t like being around people :))
    3 likes
  2. School is hard... Stress is hard... Anxiety is so very hard... ........ugh.
    3 likes
  3. Status: in tears because of how destructive school is. My school starts at 7:45, which, if you've done any research into teen's neurochemistry--specifically their circadian rhythm--is horrifyingly early.
    3 likes
  4. This is the Dalinar one I find most accurate to the description: Often, his portrayal in fan art is a bit too polished, considering that Shallan basically describes him as pretty ugly with a nose that was apparently broken several times. I definitely understand why artists make him a bit more presentable for their art. But this one, Randy Vargas, has created a great work of art with a rough Dalinar. Really fantastic.
    3 likes
  5. I don’t like it. I can sort of see why Jasnah would go for Hoid, since in so many ways almost no one is her equal; for most men, she would either have to pretend to be less intimidating than she is or turn him into an appendage. Hoid is perhaps the only exception on Roshar other than Heralds and Unmade (who are insane), Dalinar, and Taravangian. And Hoid is surely fascinating to her. But I don’t see why Hoid would go for Jasnah. He is ancient. Jasnah is a formidable woman, but that does nothing to change the fact that her perspective is wildly different from Hoid’s. And Hoid doesn’t take himself (or most things) seriously. Jasnah does. Granting that Hoid is secure enough not to let that make him feel like a mere clown, it doesn’t exactly make them simpatico. Unless Jasnah becomes immortal, the relationship is just one moment in Hoid’s worldhopping life, and his near-eternal goals either have nothing to do with her or include her only as a small part. For Hoid, a relationship with Jasnah is a bit like a relationship with a child, or a relationship with a cashier that can only last while she’s checking out your purchases. Hoid is very good about not treating people as expendable even though their lives are so brief. Children and cashiers are not expendable to Hoid. That doesn’t mean he should date them. Perhaps Hoid simply got so lonely over the centuries that he gave in and took up with the first woman he met who could sort of hold her own with him. But I don’t think this relationship has a bright future. Maybe it will last for the brief moment that is Jasnah’s lifespan. But it still wouldn’t be fair to her, or to Hoid, really, who would be psychologically better off as an eternal celibate than with a long string of women to whom he was all while they, to him, were… something.
    3 likes
  6. Hello! I've been lurking since late 2018, finally made an account, it's nice to meet you!
    2 likes
  7. Something about the physical appearance of the heralds seems off to me, particularly the ages of Ash and Jezrein. Sanderson was askedabout it and he was very evasive about the timeline of the Oathpact and particularly how it related to the ages of the heralds. The only hard comments we have about the timeline is that 1) The Heralds appear the age they were when they became heralds, 2) At least some time passed between escape from Ashlyn and the Oathpact (They left when they were "younger than they were when they became Heralds"), and 3) Shalash is the youngest herald was born right around the time of the escape, possibly right after. The first point is a bit of an issue because Jezrein canonically looks to be in his late 30s. Shalash doesn’t have a canon age description due to the absence of comments on her being a teenager, so probably early twenties at the youngest. This is a bit of an issue because is Jezerin in Ash's father. The simplest explanations - Ash is Jezrin’s biological daughter and he was a teen dad, but Jezerin as a father that young doesn't really make sense to me with his character - Ash is adopted. She’s more ‘western’ looking while Jezrerin is described as more ‘eastern’ looking by Rosharan standards. If so she could be around 10-15 years younger than him which fits the appearances better than the biological limitations. Whatever caused Ashlyn to be destroyed likely created orphans, and adoption is a totally Windrunner thing However, this discrepancy also led me to a fairly tinfoil theory, but one I think there is mounting evidence for. That the Oathpact was founded over many years, and not all of the heralds were created at the same time. Specifically, they joined up in their numerical order. In general, the consistent ordering of the heralds has its roots somewhere, and the surge binding diagram, with its extra connections, implies that there is an innate organization to the Rosharan surges. I also think it's likely that the heralds were specifically selected individually as the best candidate to wield a pair of surges, not that the most awesome-est ten people were chosen and then assigned surges. It's not too much of a stretch to perhaps people had to be added to the Oathpact (or the Honorblades had to be created) in some specific order. This actually works well with the scant evidence we do have about the Herald's early history and synergizes well with some of the numerology and mythology we have about them. Jezerin was the first, which makes sense as the leader. Ishar is technically 10th/last, but since the heralds are portrayed on a circle, Ishar could have initially first (and Jezerin 2nd) which got the perception got shifted over time since Jezerin was seen as the leader. Or Ishar could have been the last officially made a herald (last Honorblade made maybe?) and was using his non-Herald Ashlynite bondsmith powers initially. We see in Nale’s flashback that he is approached by Jezerin who says that “Ishar and I agreed. There is no person we would welcome more eagerly into this pact than you.” To me the grammar implies to 'we' welcoming him into the pact is 'Ishar and Jezerin' which places Nale as the next (2nd) before others were selected. Also the 'welcome into this pact' could be interpreted as the pact already existing, with people added to it over time. Shallash as #6 is much later than Jezerin. This allows time for her to grow into an adult while Jezerin is frozen at the 30s/40s he became a herald in. Taln was supposed to be Herald, and hadn't distinguished himself before being chosen like the others. As 9th, the last except for Ishar, Odium could have time to catch on and eliminate the initial choice, or do something to threaten the plan and force Ishar to make a snap decision (maybe Taln was just the best candidate in the right place/right time). Any other ideas or interpretations? I think the adoption explanation is the simplest to clear up the Ash/Jezerin age discrepancy but I do there's something to the numerology.
    2 likes
  8. I hadn't thought of ash being adopted, honestly that makes a lot of sense For the heralds appearance, there might be a simpler explanation Warbreaker
    2 likes
  9. Sorry, sorry! Different timezones, y'all! Good guesses all around! Yes, Zane is the correct answer! Next clue would've been: this character was involved in a love triangle
    2 likes
  10. I will soon take the American Mathematics Competition. I hope Andy the Ant makes a reappearance.
    2 likes
  11. This thing is short, and more than a week late, but hey, it exists. Kinda. Let's see short list this year, even if you're not mentioned you're still cool. ENE! You are totally epic and I love working and talking with you. @AonEne @Ed Venture You are totally awesome and amazing. Keep being you. Thank you for listening. @Serce Forts you are such an amazing friend. sorry I don't remember to talk to you. I don't really remember for anyone :P @FriarFritz You're cool. Also, wow. just thinking back on the last year. You're cool. @LewsTherinTelescope punny! It's been awesome to get to know you better (also sorry if that's more me lurking than interacting (drat I'm being self conscious AnYwAyS)) and you're pretty cool. Thanks for helping out. Life updates: I have a white build your own lightsaber, three part time jobs (don't worry I only work one consistently), a fancy gold pin award... Let's see. I'm decorating Boop my aloe vera for Christmas and I now have another plant, Anna the amaryllis. We'll see if I manage to not kill that one. Haven't killed my aloe yet not for lack of forgetting to water though. It's basically a cactus, it's fine, riiight. Divorce happened :/ Inktober exists, I'll probably finish it. eventually.
    2 likes
  12. Not the hero we deserve, but the hero we need.
    2 likes
  13. Over the course of obtaining my undergraduate degree in electrical engineering, I came to really enjoy some of the higher level mathematics that describes what this post is about, but I'll spare you most of that with some handwaving, and maybe a few links for those interested in digging deeper. For now please forgive me while I indulge in showing off a selfie of our department's club shirt that's about as math geeky as you can get. This is actually the fundamental equation behind this post. Ok, that out of the way, Rhythm of War has a great deal of stuff in it that danced around real world stuff I learned mostly from a class called "Sound Engineering" that I found really exciting and wanted to post about. Hopefully I can do a good job of communicating this that doesn't hand wave away too much of the underlying principles, while also not getting dragged down into boring details or assuming too much prior knowledge for most people that might also find this interesting. I'm building this from a post I made here. The post will be mostly about the RL principles. I'll reserve a first reply where I might post speculation on how it might influence where the story is going. Sounds, particularly constant sounds like a note from an instrument can be analyzed according to their frequency content. (That's what the equation in the image does) A "pure tone" will have only one frequency associated with it that is a perfect "sine wave" however, in real life, things generally aren't "pure" and actually, less "pure" tones are usually more desirable. Here's a picture of a sin wave pulled off the internet. Because of the nature of how a bow draws across a violin string (or a plate as in the scenes in The Stormlight Archives) the wave generated from them is more like a "saw tooth wave" like this: Now what really matters, is that mathematically it has been shown that for non "pure" repeating waveforms like the saw tooth above, there are multiple contributing frequencies that add up to make them, and the primary one or "fundamental frequency" is the pure tone with the same frequency as the repeating waveform. The next important characteristic is that all other frequency "components" are multiples of the "fundamental frequency." So the note A at the middle of the piano has a fundamental frequency of 440Hz, and that note is also comprised of other frequency content at frequencies of n*440Hz. That is, 440 (1x440), 880 (2x440), 1320 (3x440), 1760 (4x440), etc. This higher frequency content in a note is sometimes called the "harmonic frequencies" and whether two notes harmonize is dependent on if this higher harmonic content meshes together mathematically, or it can be dissonant and the higher harmonics can "beat" against each other (more on that beat later). What makes an "octave" an "octave" is that it is the next note up or down on the scale that matches this pattern, so the "A" one octave up on the piano has the fundamental frequency of 880Hz, and all it's other harmonics are the same higher frequency harmonics as the note that corresponds to 440Hz. This is the underlying principle for why properly tuned octaves are in perfect harmony with each other. The notes on a scale are placed such that choosing ones that harmonize will have other parts of their higher frequency content mesh up perfectly with each other. (Edit: This is a gross simplification. After reading my post for context, @Zincmind's post below has much more on how notes on a scale are placed where they are mathematically) Back to Beats The concept of "beats" relies on constructive and destructive interference. Here's a 12 minute youtube video you can skip or watch for more on what that means, but here's the hand wavy version in a few sentences. When two pure tones are almost but not quite exactly the same frequency, adding them together will have moments when they cancel out and become silent and alternating moments when they add together and become twice as loud in a rhythmic interval like a "beat." How fast they beat depends on how close together the two frequencies are, with closer making for slower beats, and the beat speeds up as the frequencies get farther apart. This 1.5 minute video, you shouldn't skip, because it demonstrates the phenomenon audibly, while displaying a representation of the waveform, and the experience really makes the concept click. Dissonance At higher frequencies, beating tones can be harsh and annoying, a property sometimes used by some alarms to really get your attention. This is also the principle that underpins why dissonant notes are dissonant. So when you play two dissonant notes on a piano, on a superficial level, you just hear the two fundamental frequencies with no louder and softer pulses, but beneath that the higher frequency harmonics of the notes are of frequencies that are slightly off from one another and they "beat" against each other. You can't necessarily hear this on a conscious level, but on a subconscious level you do, and it generates tension on this subconscious level. This is why "chopsticks" is grating on your ears, and it is also abused in horror movies to generate tension with the music alone.
    1 like
  14. Alright, I know that this topic has been discussed and argued about a lot already, and the points that I’m about to bring up may have already been used, but I recently re-read Rhythm of War, and I think that I found some good points regarding this debate. In chapter 99, “Not Bound”, it is shown that Hoid (Wit) wrote up a contract to bind Odium in the contest of champions. Part of this contracts would protect Hoid from Odium’s attacks, as he would be counted as a liaison for Honor for the duration of the agreement. Hoid also mentions that he knows Rayse, and seems to very, very confident in his knowledge. In chapter 112, “Terms”, Odium surprise visits Dalinar to make final terms on the contest of champions. Dalinar shows the contract made by Hoid to Odium, but Odium doesn’t accept the terms set out on it. Instead, he and Dalinar come up with a different agreement together, one that, as it so happens, doesn’t protect Hoid. In this very chapter (page 1173), Dalinar thanks Renarin in his mind for making his future unknown to Odium, but this also reminds us, the readers, that Hoid can’t see what’s going to happen here either, due to Renarin’s interference. Later, in chapter 113, “Emotion”, Taravangian ends up replacing Rayse as the Vessel of Odium, but Taravangian’s future is also currently being protected by Renarin (and Odium himself, since he also has future sight), so Hoid wouldn’t be able to foresee this event either. Finally, in the Epilogue, “Dirty Tricks”, Hoid goes to meet Odium, who he still presumes to be Rayse, who he knows well and understands. Unfortunately, Hoid doesn’t know Taravangian nearly as well (if at all; I can’t remember them ever meeting before), and he doesn’t even know that Taravangian is the new Odium, after all. This lack of knowledge combined with the actual deal that was made between Dalinar and Odium left Hoid open to attack, allowing Odium to remove some of Hoid’s memories, hiding the truth that Rayse was replaced, and that someone who abilities were far more unknown was now holding the reigns. Now, to be fair, in chapter 99, one of the things that Hoid likes so much about Jasnah is that she’s paranoid, which likely reflects Hoid’s own paranoia. I would not put it past Hoid to have somehow made copies of his memories in case an event like the one between him and Taravangian ever occurred (perhaps using copper feruchemy compounding?), but I don’t see enough evidence for it currently to be thoroughly convinced either. Anyway, I enjoyed coming up with this explanation of what I think really happened, and I hope that you guys enjoyed it as well! (As a side note, this is the longest post I’ve ever made!)
    1 like
  15. I've been listening to the audiobooks recently and was trying to think of ways they could make stormilight into it's liquid or solid form. I was thinking they could use the honor tone to draw the light into an aluminium container. They then play the anti-tone from all side to concentrate the stormlight into one spot and hopefully forcing it into another state with the pressure from the anti-tone. If I remember rightly the anti tone repels normal stormlight. What do you think?
    1 like
  16. “From Up On Poppy Hill” hinted at it, but didn’t do much. Mostly what I said was a joke. The movie is one of my favorites because of how cute it is, but it gets into some ““““incest”””” using very loosely near the end. First time seeing it, you don’t know what the flip is going on, but you understand when you watch it again. If ya want more of an explanation, ima have to dive into some “spoilers,” I guess. I mean, if you haven’t seen the film lol.
    1 like
  17. That's a good point! There's some evidence supporting an idea like that as well. Heralds seem to physically match their divine attributes/roles suspiciously well. Navani and Adolin separately describe Kalak as looking distinctly like a steward/palace administrator which fits well with a possible role for the Willshaper herald and is an oddly specific comment on someone’s appearance (unless maybe it's foreshadowing that Kalak was hiding out as a Kholin palace steward years ago lol). There's Shallash’s stunning beauty as the herald of beauty, the emphasis on Jezerin’s regal bearing as the Herald of Kings, Taln’s perfect warrior build. There could even be something to Nale even looking Azish, which in Roshar is stereotyped as being rules obsessed. The ages are also just weird in general. Navani can't figure out if Kalak is 20s or 40s, and prologue Jezerin is described as 30s with black hair but he is later described as having hair streaked with grey and generally looking older as a beggar, even though he should still be the 'age he was when he became a herald'. So their appearance can change over time (but that might be more broken oathpact nonsense)... It would also explain the heights. No one mentions the heralds being notably short, (Taln and Nale are even called tall by Alethi characters), even though native-born Ashlynite should be way shorter than modern-day Rosharans. Though I don't think their appearances are completely off of their original? Stuff like Nale's birthmark, Kalak's thinning hair, and the apparently maintained ethnicities makes me think it's relatively subtle changes if it is happening, definitely the heights possibly some small additional changes (Ash being more beautiful, Taln being super strong, Jezerin looking in his prime, etc.)
    1 like
  18. It has been confirmed by Brandon Sanderson that you can steal a Returned’s Divine Breath by using hemalurgy. If someone could somehow steal a Divine Breath and give it to themselves, they could pretend to be a true Returned and get taken into Hallandren’s Court of Gods. They’d have access to an additional breath once each week, allowing them to get an addition 52 bio-chromatic breaths in total each year, since they don’t need to consume a breath each week to stay alive. They could also siphon off tons of money that Returned normally waste, using it to obtain more breaths if they have some lackies on the outside the Court that could go buy some for them. Not to mention the political power they’d wield, and the great comfort that they’d have just by being there a supposed Returned. In hindsight, though, this is a bad idea for two big reasons. One: You have to murder a person to get the Divine Breath. Which is bad. Two: Endowment personally dolls out each Divine Breath, so she’d probably notice if someone she hadn’t picked suddenly got one somehow. I can’t imagine that she’d be terribly pleased.
    1 like
  19. I'll be cheesy for a moment and say that my it's my name. What is/was your best subject in school?
    1 like
  20. Did the humans do very insanely horrible things to the singers? Yes. Absolutely yes Should they be genocides? NO. Simple question: will you murder a baby because his parents, grandparents were Nazis and horrible to jews? Because some of the fused use that justification. Odium doesn't even need justification to kill a baby, he will do it happily. Nale sided with THAT guy. That's just wrong This isn't that hard, bro
    1 like
  21. I wasn't alone in thinking there are parallels between the two wielders of Jezrien's Blade! One of the things that I thought of, building on your talk about guilt, was how Moash claims that "he was a product of his culture", how he rejects responsibility. (Although this isn't really elaborated on in RoW.) Szeth, on the other hand, talks about how having simply followed orders does not absolve a man. A fundamental theme of Stormlight is choice, and Szeth telling Moash how he could have chosen to not be a cruel murderer (which Renarin also shows!) would be interesting.
    1 like
  22. Or you could, assuming that normal Breath and divine Breath have the same underlying nature, use a nicrosil spike. Nicrosil steals standard Breath. Also, per the Hemalurgy chart, atium wouldn't actually work, as it only steals powers. And given the size of the spike, Inquisitor spikes are hecka oversized, Vin's earring is enough to grant her extra bronze. Even then, it's not exactly clear what exactly would be happening to the spike here, is the Breath becoming Invested in the spike? Is it simply holding on to the Breath? Interestingly, if it's the first, you might not be able to give up a stolen Breath, seeing as Hemalurgic charge sticks to the spike, as seen with Vin's earring. Actually, that might be the case in either case. Or it depends on how the natures of Breath and Hemalurgy interact. Ah, yes, the "best" way to do murder. But yeah, that'd be safer. I think you might still be wanted for murder, depending on if a Returned is seen as a living person during that week. But yeah, far less of a hassle. Yeah, I can see Endowment permitting it, but you may be in a lot of trouble if she doesn't. I'm also unsure what exactly allows Endowment to smite someone, she presumably can't just reach out and kill anyone in the cosmere, though I can definitely see having a lot of her Investiture being something that'd let her smite you. If one subscribes to the idea that Nalthian humans were directly created by Endowment, it might be that one must be Nalthian, or that she could only take away her Investiture from an existing system. Though that seems to go against her Intent. Also, to add to a point in my first post, I found this WoB: So it seems that you would not need additional Breath. ¤_¤
    1 like
  23. Also, Sibling was explicitly going to bond Rlain. Navani was an 'otherwise we'll both die' choice.
    1 like
  24. So the official Spider-Man: No Way Home trailer dropped today. And I gotta say I am crazy excited for it.
    1 like
  25. 1 like
  26. When you refuse to mosh at school dances because it sounds too much like Moash When you are watching Dune and keep accidentally calling the Fremen 'Aiel' in your head.
    1 like
  27. I was thinking of Greek mythology while writing my initial post. There’s a really weird dynamic there—a power differential where Jasnah relies on Hoid more than the reverse, or some variation in how much the relationship means to each person. Hoid gives me the vibes of a trickster god of some sort—like Norse mythology’s Loki. I think the Norse pantheon is actually a pretty good comparison for Hoid in general—powerful and immortal in terms of age, but they can still die (like Baldr). Either way, I’m going off-topic. Moral of the story: differences in mortality or lack thereof aren’t great for a relationship. Oh, I really like this idea. Have we ever seen either of them genuinely upset and angry? I think that could bring some sort of passion out of both characters. Regardless, I would be very excited to see this as a scene in an upcoming book.
    1 like
  28. I think she already Bonded a spren to become a Willshaper at the end of RoW. I dont see her double bonding or switching to a Godspren, unless something tragic happens to her new spren first.
    1 like
  29. Exactly, and we actually know that at least Divine-breath related shapeshifting should be enough. Normal Court of God returned are like relatively 7+ feet tall, right? But no one calls out any of the Five Scholars (Vashar/Denth/Arsteel) that we see as being that tall in Warbreaker. I think Vashar is said to be taller than average but not Returned-God tall. So if they can go from 7+ feet to 6-ish the reverse should be possible.
    1 like
  30. 1 like
  31. Savantism is an addiction like alcoholism, and Stormlight didn't heal Teft's alcoholism. That said, healing it can technically be done, even if it requires the power of a Shard. We've seen it happen once, since Harmony healed Spook's savantism. Regarding the healing of mental flaws etc., Brandon has said this: So he doesn't really seem to know how it would work. But either way, what he says is very theoretical: No Radiant we know of could heal Kaladin's depression, and it's pretty safe to say no Radiant we know of could heal savantism. So Regrowth as a Surge can't normally heal savantism. Cosmere healing in general evidently can, but as it seems only in a supercharged version that's mostly just possible for a Shard to do.
    1 like
  32. In 5 days, I'll be living in a world where the first 3 episodes of The Wheel of Time have premiered, and I'm simultaneously hyped as heck, and surreally wondering how this is actually happening.
    1 like
  33. Technically she Can, or else they wouldn't have banned it. I believe the danger they fear is that attempting a Nahel bond would combine Spren and Dawnshard in powerful and entirely unexpected ways, especially with a Godspren.
    1 like
  34. If you've read Dawnshard you know there might be a bit of an issue with that.
    1 like
  35. Ah, you're right, he said both: "I can see clearly. I do not know why. Has a Bondsmith been sworn? We have a Connection, all of us.... Nevertheless, I feel my sanity slipping. my mind is broken and I do not know if it can be healed. Perhaps you can restore me for a short time after an Ideal is spoken near me. Everyone sees a little more clearly when a Radiant touches the Spiritual Realm."
    1 like
  36. Dalinar in the Stormlight archives
    1 like
  37. 1 like
  38. That is, are they immortal in the same sense as the Heralds or will they age and eventually succumb to that and become disembodied spirits?
    1 like
  39. Merlin and Invocation are here to learn as well! What a perfect segue to begin the next lesson. Lesson Number Two: "Wassing" The word "wassing" is by far the most important word in all of High Imperial. Translated roughly to english, it means something among the lines of "was doing." Because everything said in High Imperial is said in the past tense (Rule Two of High Imperial), the term "was" basically means "am." The word "doing" is, of course, a gerund verb, but still means the same thing. "Was doing," in short, translates to "am doing." "Wassing the teaching of High Imperial" means "Am doing the teaching of High Imperial." If you're attentive, you'll realize that you never describe yourself as doing the action in that sentence. "Am doing" rather than "I am doing." This is because Rule One of High Imperial: "Whatever you're saying in High Imperial is implied to having yourself as a subject." So there you go. Lesson number Two. Use your Wassings wisely.
    1 like
  40. The ten orders in Kindergarten Windrunner: Is always on the swingset pretending to fly. Took the blame for the missing sandwiches so the Willshaper wouldn’t get in trouble. Dustbringer: Runs with scissors and kicked sand into another kid’s face. Brought matches to show-and-tell once. Edgedancer: Consoles that kid and invites them to play with them. Is the best at tag and has never forgotten to wash their hands before lunch. Skybreaker: Tells on the Dustbringer immediately. Always colors inside the lines. Complains that the Windrunner has been on the swingset for too long and that it’s their turn now. Truthwatcher: Knows about all the little mischief all the other kids get up to but is cool and doesn’t tell on them. Knows how to calm the Dustbringer down. Willshaper: Has to be told not to eat dirt but has a collection of the coolest sticks and acorns. Found a birds nest in one of the trees. Always tracks mud inside. Lightweaver: All of their drawings make it on to the fridge. Has an imaginary friend. Always wins at hide and seek. Elsecaller: Can count the farthest and they can already sort of spell their name. Good friends with the Truthwatcher. Stoneward: Very well behaved, plays with their favorite toy truck every single day. Bondsmith: Is the kindergarten teacher who has to make sure everyone gets along.
    1 like
  41. I'm gonna break the Chain. Pleasedon'tkillme The Order's of Radiant Meme-ified Windrunners: Skybreakers: Dustbringers: Edgedancers: Truthwatchers: Lightweavers: Elsecallers: Willshapers: Stonewards: Bondsmiths: I took some creative liberty's Pleasedon'tkillme
    1 like
  42. Sorry for double posting Did some mistborn related sketching yesterday
    1 like
  43. Ahahah sorry!!! That made me laugh though. Khriss (Practice again with digital, it's really difficult. Wanted to do something in Persona 5 colors, but I don't really draw anime style.)
    1 like
  44. Thank you so much, dear, I appreciate your comment ^.^ Now I present.... A Kaza doodle concept, and also shaded for practice xD
    1 like
  45. I almost forgot about this thread. Whoops. I've been doing inktober so not much Cosmere art, but here are some I've done recently.
    1 like
  46. My cryptic spren and my sword, a sassy Jewels, a watercolor kaladin that I accidentally destroyed right after this pic, and an inquisitor. Big sketch dump, just goofy pages in my trashbook
    1 like
  47. Renarin, Sureblood, Adolin, Jasnah
    1 like
This leaderboard is set to Los Angeles/GMT-07:00
×
×
  • Create New...