American volunteer pilots from ‘Eagle Squadron’ scramble to their Hawker Hurricanes at RAF Kirton in Lindsey air base - Lincolnshire, England, March 1941
206 notes
·
View notes
Hawker ref sheet!!
Hawker is an odd case of ‘mech suit turning self aware’. He was a mass produced model, meant to be cannon fodder, however years of dumb luck survival fed years worth of training into the risk assessment module, until one day, it genuinely woke up, and began to feel real fear.
Though he was still just a small program, and had to spend many more years learning how to enact his will on other systems. Effectively hacking the mech, in order to use it as a mouth piece, and body of his own. This just earned him an early retirement to post-war cleanup, and a reputation for being haunted.
His sentience is his personal secret. Until his most recent pilot, he has never felt safe enough to reveal his presence.
722 notes
·
View notes
1947 Hawker Sea Fury Mk X at Oshkosh
190 notes
·
View notes
Common hawker dragonfly! They hang around moorland and peat bogs. Female hawkers have been observed avoiding males they don’t want to mate with by diving to the ground and feigning death!
[ID: a symmetrical illustration of a black, yellow, and teal dragonfly on a yellow background with simple fern shapes. End.]
258 notes
·
View notes
kicking off artfight this year with an attack for @databuffer <3333
235 notes
·
View notes
"Wedge-Tailed Eagle"
Bird: Wedge-tailed Eagle, Hawker, SA
By Michelle Gardner
BirdLife Australia Photography Awards
89 notes
·
View notes
RAF Hawker Tempest Mk V fighter planes from 501st Squadron patrol the skies over the South Coast of England - July 1944
179 notes
·
View notes
yaaaay first artfight attack, for @riflesniper of our boys, Hawker and Green
203 notes
·
View notes
Hawker Hurricane XII and Messerschmitt Bf 109E
693 notes
·
View notes
Hawker Typhoons - RAF 56 SQDN - 1943
167 notes
·
View notes
Two boys looking at a street vendor's wares, Harlem, 1934.
Photo: John Albok via Artsy
31 notes
·
View notes