Tumgik
#$4.5m
autistickaitovocaloid · 7 months
Text
Just remembered my cryptonloids as sharks doodle idea why the fuck did I make kaito a whale shark.
5 notes · View notes
terendelev · 5 months
Text
I swear if Lahabrea's hair costs too much I will kill everyone in this game I need it for Calian...
3 notes · View notes
shashinee · 6 months
Text
youtube
2 notes · View notes
around-your-throat · 6 months
Text
anyone else had the unique experience of checking the osu beatmap listing everyday and freaking out when a map for fall out boy's XO came out in may 2022 and it turned out to be a commission. then a map for fall out boy's headfirst slide came out in november 2022 and it turned out to be a remade of one from 2009. and realizing that the last most recent ranked map for fall out boy is still the krewella remix of alone together in 2016
2 notes · View notes
Text
It's actually kinda funny at PC cuz I've been like, running some hot hot fashionscape I've mostly shared B4 + Skulled a few people have noticed me, mostly that I'm still at PC and they've done their full grind for elite void/w/e and the reactions to what I've doing have been great lol
4 notes · View notes
distantsonata · 2 years
Text
4000 dollars to voice bayonetta is an incredibly fucked up joke though that's so sad
2 notes · View notes
rombae · 3 months
Text
0 notes
grunge-mermaid · 11 months
Text
so this just came up on my pinterest feed:
Tumblr media
the average individual income in my nearest major city is $64,500 and average household income is $126,700. (according to Career Beacon, whoever they are)
assuming Career Beacon means that is the average gross salary, at 2.5x that's $161,250 and $316,750 respectively.
if they mean that is the average net household income, that bumps it up to $87,500 and approximately $200,000. So according to the pinterest advice, your budget for a house should be $218,750 or $500,000.
average house price in that same city? close to $700k
In my old neighbourhood in that city, condo PARKING SPACES were regularly listed for $40k-$75k. you can't even get a reasonable studio condo anywhere in the city proper for $316,000. in the outskirts, like out past the suburbs...maybe. but then you're paying through the nose for transportation.
you can get a nice (and I do actually mean nice, I'm not being sarcastic or snarky at all I swear) trailer home in the middle of fucking nowhere in a 55+ community for $150-$300k. good luck accessing transit though.
0 notes
intertriste · 1 year
Text
Marotta uomo di niente hai rovinato un matrimonio tra la Roma e Smalling prima o poi dovrai pagare per ciò che stai facendo
1 note · View note
mwydyn · 2 years
Text
I don't like falling in bouldering but it is really really fun to drop from high up
1 note · View note
emptytruck100 · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media
An Culu, this 1990 Gothic style castle in Kenmare, Co Kerry, Ireland was put on the market in 2007, for €15m and sold 13 yrs. later “at a price close to the asking figure of €4.5 million.” ($4.89M)
Tumblr media
When the original owner bought the 4.5 acre land, he couldn't decide what to build on it, until the planners said, "You've got to build a castle."
Tumblr media
Cozy sitting room with a massive fireplace and mezzanines above. The new owner intends to spend a large part of the year at An Culu “where he plans to entertain overseas guests and business associates as well as being able to appreciate some down time in this luxurious haven.”
Tumblr media
Look at the living room (the original owner and his family lived here full time until the kids grew up and it was too big).
Tumblr media
Love this sun room.
Tumblr media
The large kitchen is modern.
Tumblr media
The stairs are very grand.
Tumblr media
The primary bedroom is suitable for royalty.
Tumblr media
But, look at the grotto style pool in the basement rec room.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
There's a nice big patio on the water.
Tumblr media
Amazing that it took 13 years to sell.
185 notes · View notes
bookshelfdreams · 9 months
Text
hey babes remember this project
(yeah neither do I it's been months and months) (who wants to make a wool coat in the height of summer anyway)
But! The last weeks have been rainy and too cool for July/August, and reminded me that autumn is right around the corner and Christmas will be here sooner than I think.
I actually finished weaving sometime in spring, I don't remember when exactly; didn't make an occasion out of it. I made 3 lengths of fabric total
Tumblr media Tumblr media
... which, as it turns out is Quite A Bit! Look at that stack :) You have no idea how satisfying it was to hold all that in my arms.
Tumblr media
Return of the King for scale
Each of these is about 55cm wide, and 230cm long which is insane, considering that I started out with a 4.5m warp. Granted, about 40-50cm of that are wasted on the loom and another 10% or so loss has to be calculated in (because of course the warp doesn't stay straight, it goes around the weft which means it becomes shorter) AND the threads being wool they have a lot of stretch to them. But still, that's a lot of shrinking, for a fabric that's still loose enough to fray. No wonder clothing was valuable as fuck, it's not even the amount of work that goes into it, but the portion of that work that's essentially wasted. And if I had wanted to make a tight fabric, an actual broadcloth, I would have had to calculate in a lot more shrinking.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I finished this in the washing machine (I think 30°c with no spin cycle and no detergent? But I'm not sure about thaz, I forgot 59nwrite it down I think). Then I gave each piece a lanolin bath. I may have overdone it a little? Some of the wool feels a tiny bit - well not exactly greasy but soapy. Whatever. It does improve the wool's hydrophobic properties and makes it feel a little softer.
And all the pieces fit!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
This was very satisfying
I did not, however, have enough of the lilac linen that I originally wanted to use for lining. So I bought another fabric, the only one I could find that I liked: A very, very lightweight brown linen.
Tumblr media
The listing: This is very light and transparent! Me, opening the package:..... oh wow, I didn't know it would be this light and transparent
I hope it will work. There's only one way to find out.
That's all I have for now! I have cut out the front and back pieces, and now it's just sewing, sewing, sewing.
155 notes · View notes
fablegaze · 7 months
Text
Spectember day 17 - evolutionary history of dragons
yet again reusing old art because i am still too tired to draw new stuff
all modern dragons are descended from a hexapodal ancestor; the salamander
Tumblr media
(all further drawings show the nostrils on the head which was a mistake oops. they're not supposed to be on the head but i also haven't decided where they should be yet)
dragons have split into a multitude of clades, and I'm focusing on wyverns (flying dragons) & drakes (bipedal, arboreal dragons), but there are also lindwyrms (long, serpentine dragons), hydras (dragons that have turned a variety of limbs into false heads), and sea serpents (aquatic dragons)
wyverns started out small, gliding from treetop to treetop with a membrane that stretched between their limbs and tail. somewhere along the line, they started evolving powered flight, and the two outer fingers on their middle legs grew to accommodate this
Tumblr media
eventually this grew into the fully fledged wings that wyverns have today. sapient wyverns have, on average, a wingspan of about 15ft (4.5m). larger wyverns do exist, but the vast majority of them are smaller than this
Tumblr media
the history of drakes is a lot simpler than wyverns: they learned to climb trees. they're like the monkeys of the dragon world, helped along by thumbs on every foot & a prehensile tail
Tumblr media
they love to scamper and scurry and scuttle
Tumblr media
120 notes · View notes
scotianostra · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
On February 22nd 1371, King David II died at Edinburgh Castle.
David Bruce was born on March 5th 1324 after his parents, Robert and Elizabeth de Burgh had been married for 22 years. As the anniversary is only 11 days away I will post a full biography of him then.
In the meantime I shall cover, what during his lifetime, would have been one of his greatest accomplishments, the building of David’s Tower.
The mighty David’s Tower once stood in Edinburgh Castle The tower was the heart of the castle in the late 1300s and originally stood over 30m high, the second pic shows how it might have looked, the third is Andrew Spratt's interpretation showing how the castle may have looked back then. While the first imagining of the tower might be more aesthetically pleasing, I think the Andrew’s one is possibly nearer how it may have looked, more of a defensive structure. The first one is based on a 19th century sketch by architect David Bryce, who was commissioned to recreate the Tower as a memorial to Prince Albert.
Through recent years Castle conservationists have worked on excavations as it is likely that there are more towers buried underneath new structures.
When asked if rebuilding of the tower was in the vision for the castle, architect said “no, we do not know what it really looked like, so would not be genuine.” Indeed, not much is known about the actual architecture of the tower.
Here’s what Edinburgh Castle’s blog says on the Tower, it’s a great insight on how the castle developed over the centuries, and how archaeologists rediscovered the remains of the Tower:
They found it hidden at the back of the canteen coal cellar: a narrow window that no-one had looked through for centuries.
Three respected scholars huddled inside the dark vault deep below Edinburgh Castle to examine the blocked-up opening. Cutting through 2.3m of medieval masonry, the window was a mystery. To find out what lay on the other side, they decided to dig down from above, in the middle of Half-Moon Battery.
It was 1912 and the three Royal Commissioners of Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland were about to rediscover a lost landmark that once dominated Edinburgh Castle: David’s Tower.
This mighty building was raised by King David II, son of Robert the Bruce. It served as his own residence, as well as a secure storehouse for royal treasures. It was the chief strength of the castle. But in the final bombardment that ended the Lang Siege in 1573, the tower was sent crashing down by English cannon. Within a few years, its ruins had been sealed inside a new defensive structure: the Half-Moon Battery.
In the 1880s the architect Hippolyte Blanc (who rebuilt the Great Hall) had suggested the coal cellar could be a surviving part of David’s Tower. It branched out from the soldier’s canteen in the Palace and was clearly constructed from older stonework.
William Thomas Oldrieve, one of the three commissioners, later wrote about its rediscovery. The unassuming Englishman was principal architect for Scotland with the Office of Works. He had developed a passion for the country’s historic buildings.
Oldrieve’s workmen dug 1.5m through loose soil from the top of the Half-Moon Battery before revealing the arrow slit from the other side of that medieval wall. But there was more to come. Another 4.5m down, they hit the top of a stone vault. On 23 August, they broke through the vault and continued downwards a further 9m until they reached bedrock. Below the arrow slit was a doorway and a flight of well-worn steps that once led down the Castle Rock. This was once the front door of the stronghold.
Inside, the men found more vaults and passageways cocooned within the walls of the Half-Moon Battery. Within the rubble were cannon balls and fragments of explosive shells, evidence of the castle’s violent heritage. On the tower’s northern side was a gun hole dating the mid-1500s. Once its outer end had been exposed, it looked straight down the Royal Mile.
Oldrieve and his fellow commissioners realised the significance of the discoveries. Here were the remains of David’s Tower, standing almost 15m in places
Today, you can retrace the footsteps of Oldrieve and his colleagues, visiting much of what is left of David’s Tower.
Want to know more about the castle? Check out their blog here https://www.edinburghcastle.scot/
22 notes · View notes
analanaisdying · 1 month
Text
~ !!! Workout !!! ~
finally taking the time to write this out and finalize all the deails so maybe ill actually do it.
Also I'm going to add how many cals everything burns next to it, however I want to clarify that these numbers will only be acurate FOR ME. It would only be acurate for you too if you have the same hight and weight as me.
I am 5'7/170cm tall and I weigh 122lbs/55.3kg
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
START
Cardio x1
3 min walk (4.5m/h) -> about 18 cals burned
3 min jog (7m/h) -> about 30 cals burned
Total cals burned: 48 cals
Drink water
Abs x3
1 min plank -> about 5 cals burned
1 min plank hip dips -> about 5 cals burned
1 min scissor kicks -> about 12 cals burned
10 crunches -> about 2 cals burned
1 min russian twists (with a 10lb weight) -> about 5 cals burned
Total cals burned: 87 cals
Drink water
Legs x3
30 squats (with a 10lb weight) -> about 10 cals burned
30 lunges (each side) (with a 10lb weight) -> about 15 cals burned
50 side leg raises (each side) (with a resistance band) -> about 16 cals burned
50 glute bridges with hip abduction -> about 15 cals burned
1 min wall sit -> about 7 cals burned
Total cals burned: 189 cals
Drink water
Arms x3
idk yet i need to watch some youtube videos
Drink water
FINISH
Workout total cals burned: 324 cals
18 notes · View notes