After some final touchups I think I’ll be ready to release this book tomorrow. Full preview is coming tomorrow too (I’m too tired to crop all these images right now…) I’ve settled on a price of $3+. It’s pay what you want, as long as it’s at least 3 dollars.
50 pages. USUK. All ages. Inside is black and white. Happy end (just so you know…)
This thing is a year in the making. I really hope you guys like it!
after so long, i finally bring gemtalia back. i got caught on su leaks (it’s gonna be great, gotta admit)
funny story! i’ve had this sitting unfinished in my files since july 13th. all i really had to do was finish oliver’s colors and shading and complete al’s colors and fix the shading. i dont why i thought it would be difficult. i could explain what’s happening, but i’ll leave it to you guys to determine 😉
The rest of the Mediterranean, not even Rome itself, expected that a disorderly little town on the edge of the Tiber would rise to be western history’s most influential civilization. Aside from a legacy of greatness, Rome left behind a tragic warning: if the flames of
ego, greed, and ambition are not tempered in one’s quest for glory, they will consume oneself as gluttonously as they hunger to consume the world. Armed with a lethal blade of two ends, Rome fell upon his own sword.
In the last stretch of 1915, it became clear that the war would go on for longer than expected.
my entry for @aphabriefhistoryoftime! i’m interested in the relationship between the stronger leader of the central powers, and the smaller, more dependent hungary. Check out the other entries!!
Bonjour everyone, it’s time for my claim for @aphabriefhistoryoftime! My claim was the German revolution 1848/1849, and instead of focusing solely on the bloodshed that came with it, I wanted to portray Prussia’s personal struggle some more and the hopes projected on him – which he would go on to not just disappoint but crush. So slightly more “abstract” approach that I took here.
The historic background is that in 1848, many German states had their own revolutions, including Prussia, in which the German people demanded a unified Germany. Chiefly among them was Baden which held out the longest with democratic demands alongside the national ones, but others were quite accepting of constitutional monarchy and looked towards Prussia as the leading force of this ‘Germany’. And for a moment it looked as though it could work–
but Prussia went back on concessions made towards its population and brutally beat back revolutions. Baden had to surrender in order to prevent a massacre at the hands of the Prussian military.
Baden’s design (the lady holding back Ludwig) is by @ask-baden, thank you so much as always for letting me use her design for this!