immortalje: Shane Hollander and Ilya Rozanov at face off in two levels (one per person) ([hr] shaneilya : face off levels)
immortalje ([personal profile] immortalje) wrote in [community profile] fandom_icons2026-03-13 08:52 pm
Entry tags:

61 Heated Rivalry icons

I have 61 Heated Rivalry icons to share. In the post you can find:
- 32 Shane Hollander/Ilya Rozanov
- 15 Ilya Rozanov
- 11 Shane Hollander
- 2 Svetlana Vetrova
- 1 Scott Hunter/Kip Grady

Preview:


Here @ [community profile] love_sacrificed
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 07:24 pm

Images show fragments of U.S.-made missile at bombed Iranian girls' school. We broke down the eviden

Posted by Taija PerryCook

It is unclear precisely where the remnants were found, though the images emerged amid mounting evidence the U.S. was responsible for the strike.
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 06:42 pm
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 04:12 pm

Is 'Katie Johnson,' who accused Trump of child rape, facing criminal charges? Claim lacks evidence

Posted by Rae Deng

No reputable journalists have obtained and published Katie Johnson's real address or name, making this claim impossible to substantiate.
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 03:00 pm

SAVE America Act doesn't include anti-trans provisions. Why do Trump, White House keep claiming it d

Posted by Rae Deng

As of this writing, the voting issues legislation does not include provisions on trans health care and athletes, despite Trump implying that it does.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-13 10:06 am
Entry tags:

One More Reason the Aliens Might Be Avoiding Us



Is the current location of our Solar System the reason no one's coming to visit?

One More Reason the Aliens Might Be Avoiding Us
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 01:00 pm

Email from Epstein files allegedly proves he's still alive. Here's the truth

Posted by Jordan Liles

Online users claimed the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who died in 2019, was referred to in the present tense in a 2023 email.
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-03-13 09:08 am

The Language of Liars by S L Huang



A linguist goes undercover to unravel a xenological puzzle whose answer is in plain view.

The Language of Liars by S L Huang
hyarrowen: (Swan)
hyarrowen ([personal profile] hyarrowen) wrote in [community profile] little_details2026-03-13 10:05 pm

Paint manufacture, storage and transport in Napoleonic Europe

For large-scale projects, specifically for ships. All my ship-related resources for the era are for the British Navy, and books on colour that I've read have been on artists' paints or dyes.

How would a French Imperial Navy vessel be painted, not at one of the big shipyards? Would it be mixed up on site from raw ingredients, or bought in? Would there be barrels, buckets with lids, cannisters, vats or what - and what would the paint be made of? 

Searching online produces info on painting scale models, or contemporary pictures of ships. I found a chapter on ship decoration in Conway's History of the Ship: The Line of Battle but that doesn't have the early-in-the-process details I want. I found an article on the pre-Revolutionary Navy in the International Journal of Maritime History, by David Plouviez, that's too early and still doesn't cover paint.

Thank-you in advance.
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 11:00 am
Snopes.com ([syndicated profile] snopes_feed) wrote2026-03-13 10:00 am

Did Putin post that Netanyahu died in airstrike? Don't fall for rumor

Posted by Laerke Christensen

While the post originated from a spoof account that doesn't belong to the Russian president, many screenshots failed to label it as a parody.
pattrose: (Butterfly Puppy)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 02:41 am
Entry tags:

Happy Birthday Elian_ panatomicpublishing.



I know I'm early. I didn't want to forget your big day. Have a great birthday.

((((((((((hugs))))))))))
swan_tower: (Default)
swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2026-03-13 08:12 am
Entry tags:

New Worlds: Miscellaneous Arts

Throughout the art sections of this Patreon, I've been grouping them into broad categories: visual arts, performing arts, literary arts, and so forth. But what about the arts that are kinda of . . . none of the above?

It's a trick question, honestly, because just about everything can be classed under one of those categories. But I do want to take a moment to talk about a variety of arts that, while classifiable as painting or sculpture or what have you, don't normally get included under those headers, because of how they're used or what materials they involve. It's not an exhaustive list, but it will serve as a reminder that our species is as much Homo creatrix as it is Homo sapiens: if we can use it for art, we probably have.

Let's look at the "painting" side of things -- I don't know if there's a good technical term that covers painting, drawing, and anything else involving the creation of images or designs on a two-dimensional surface. Some variations here are about technique, as in the case of frescoes: there you execute your work upon wet plaster, making the pigment far more durable. And those are usually murals, though not always, which differentiates them from both the more portable sort of art and the scale on which the average painter operates; a mural doesn't have to be enormous, but it certainly lends itself to monumental work, far beyond what a canvas could reasonably support.

The question of what is being painted leads us toward some other interesting corners. Illumination, for example, is the art of decorating the pages of books, whether by fancifying the text itself (illuminated capital letters and the like) or by including images alongside. Other people have made art out of painting eggshells -- or carving them, if the shell is thick enough; ostrich eggs are good for this, and one can imagine dragon eggs being the same way -- or the insides of glass balls. Those also frequently involve working at a very tiny scale, and it's worth noting that miniature painting is a whole field of its own, making a virtuoso display out of executing your work at a level where someone might need a magnifying glass to fully appreciate it.

(Er, "miniature painting" in the sense of "very small," not "minis for Dungeons & Dragons or a similar game." Though that's its own popular art form, too!)

In other cases, it's the medium of the decoration itself that becomes unusual. I've mentioned mosaics before, tessellating colored stones, ceramic, or glass to make an image, but you can grind even smaller than that with sandpainting. This doesn't always involve actual sand -- sometimes it's crushed pigments instead -- and some versions are more like carving in that they involve drawing in a sandy surface, but most specifically this involves pouring out sand or powder to create your designs. As you can imagine, this tends to be an ephemeral art . . . but that's often the point, especially when it's used in a ritual, religious context.

Some of these arts start rising above the two-dimensional surface in interesting ways. Beading can, when done thickly enough, become almost sculptural; it's also massively labor-intensive, which is why it became popular for sartorial displays of wealth when industrialization made the production and dying of fabric much cheaper. Quillwork is a form of fabric decoration unique to Indigenous North America, using dyed and undyed porcupine quills to create designs; among the Cheyenne, joining the elite Quilling Society that crafted such things was itself a form of status. This is distinct, however, from quilling: a different art with a similar name that curls tiny slips of paper into coils, then glues them to a backing to create images from the coils.

Paper leads us onward toward more overtly sculptural uses of that medium. What is origami, after all, but a specific kind of paper-based sculpture? That one in its strict incarnation prohibits cutting or gluing the paper to create its forms, which puts it at the polar opposite end of the spectrum from papercutting: an art some of us may have tried in simple form as kids, but skilled practitioners can achieve astonishingly complex and beautiful pictures. One particular version of this, the silhouette, is traditionally done with black paper and used especially for portraiture.

Basketry maybe should have gone into the textiles essay, both because many of its techniques are close kin to weaving and sewing, and because it very much belongs among what I termed the "functional arts" -- those which serve a utilitarian purpose while also including an aesthetic dimension. Anything pliable can potentially be used for basketry: most often plant materials like straw, willow, grass, and vines, but also animal hides or modern materials like strips of plastic. The resulting vessels are vitally important as storage containers and can even be made waterproof, especially if they're coated in clay or bitumen, but by working patterns into their design, basket-makers can also make them beautiful.

Or perhaps you go in an entirely non-utilitarian direction. Flower arranging is about taking nature's beauty -- perhaps from a garden -- and displaying it in an artificial way, knowing full well that soon the flowers will wilt. But where most of us stop at just sticking a few blooms in a vase, some artists go on to create full-blown sculptures of flowers and greenery, sometimes with complex internal structures that continue supplying water to the blooms to extend their life. There was even a competitive TV show about this, The Big Flower Fight!

I could keep going, of course. Baking is a functional art insofar as it makes something for you to eat, but it definitely has its elaborate end where the artistic value of the decoration or shaping is as much the point as the taste of the final product -- if it's edible at all, which it may not be! Amaury Guichon has made an entire TikTok phenomenon out of showcasing his monumental chocolate sculptures. I'm sure someone out there has devoted their life to the art of meat sculpture, but I'm not going to go looking for evidence of that. The point is made: if we can turn it into art, we probably will.

Which is honestly kind of amazing. Art is, after all, about doing more than the minimum required for our survival. It is a mark of our success as a species, that we have freed enough of our time from the work of acquiring food and shelter that art is possible. And it says something about our inner state, that when we have a spare moment available, we often want to spend it making something beautiful -- out of whatever comes to hand.

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/ANFkiL)
pattrose: (Firefly)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 12:27 am

(no subject)

Recipe. Dinner and dessert.
BEEF ENCHILADAS

Ingredients:
”recipe” )
pattrose: (Puppy Kitten1)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 12:20 am

Not quite 365 days questions March

Not quite 365 days questions

13. It’s International School Meals Day. Did you ever have school meals, and what dish still sticks in your memory if you did?

Yes, and the one that stood out was Fridays, when we had fish sticks. Yes, it was catholic school. To this day, I can't eat fish sticks. They're so gross.

How about you?
vriddy: Hawks with a finger on his mouth (secret)
Vriddy ([personal profile] vriddy) wrote2026-03-13 07:22 am

New Let's go Karaoke! fic: Locked in orbit (Kyouji/Satomi)

Watching the live-action movie motivated me to finally edit this fic! It doesn't actually work with the movie timeline and heavily relies on anime-only elements, but it is done :D


Locked in orbit | Let's go karaoke! | Kyouji/Satomi | 1.8k words | rated T

Summary: Kyouji has been in this time loop for a long time now, meeting Satomi and growing closer over and over, trying to keep him safe. Failing, sometimes. Those are the Bad Loops. If he plays his cards right though, Kyouji hopes he can make this loop the final one.

Read it on Dreamwidth or on AO3.
pattrose: Sallymn (Sally MN)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 12:18 am

Topics for talk March

Topics for talk.

Ways to Connect with Nature

My favorite thing to do is feed the birds and give them water. If the hummingbird vessel is empty, we have two, they dive bomb me. Very gently, though. Hubby fills them twice to four times a week. We buy tons of bird seed. We go through a lot. Anytime I want to see birds I just set my chair under the tree and watch them go after the food. I love our birds. They are a joy to behold. Today there was a hawk in our big tree. It waits for the fat pigeons. They're huge. He usually eats 2 or a third one he takes off with. I love nature.
pattrose: 00 Starfleet Academy 4 (00 Starfleet Academy 4)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 12:14 am

90 discussions questions

90 discussion questions.

13. How do you deal with really stressful days? How could you navigate them better?

You know, I don't have big stress in. My life. People ask me all the time how I deal with it, but I honestly don't get stressed easily. One of my most stressful times was when my grandson lost his wife to sleep apnea. I felt so helpless. Parents should never have to bury their children. But normally I'm very laid back and calm. I wouldn't probably know what to do with stress. Hopefully I will handle it well. That's all I can hope for.
pattrose: (Default)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-13 12:13 am
Entry tags:

Smile for a change.

* How do you know if a vampire is unwell? Because he'll be coffin.

It's dumb, but it beats some of the serious stuff I've been putting up.
thewayne: (Default)
The Wayne ([personal profile] thewayne) wrote2026-02-01 09:16 am
Entry tags:

The USA had an 88% decline in job growth in 2025

Damn that Biden and his trashing the economy!

Of course that statement is not serious, our economy was doing a great job before someone appeared to take an oath of office last year in January.

Easiest just to quote the article. "Preliminary data had indicated that the U.S. economy added 584,000 jobs last year. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics revised that number after it received additional state data and found that the labor market had added 181,000 jobs in all of 2025."

In 2024, 1.46 million jobs were added to the labor market. I can't imagine what event happened between '24 and '25. that could have caused such a change.

A decline to 12% of the previous year. Now THAT is a stellar economic policy! If you divide it up by 12 months and 50 states, that's 300 jobs per state per month. Which clearly isn't the case, but as a rough indicator it's a bit frightening. Fast food franchise employee turnover per state could probably account for that many people!

Things are perhaps looking better for '25: preliminary numbers for January show 130,000 jobs added where 55,000 were expected. But those numbers will be revised in a month or so, thus are not final. But this post and the NBC article were written before someone started World War 3 by trying to destroy Iran, so who knows what the economic backlash will happen here. We know the oil industry and market will be turbulent, we can anticipate the national debt will go up as something on the order of $11B was spent in the first week in expended munitions, and the companies that make said munitions will probably get a big boost. But overall, the stock market isn't doing that great, I know my funds and stocks are down and I'm not an aggressive investor.

A job market this stagnant can be signs heralding a recession, and we still have the growing AI bubble which has not yet popped which will gut the tech sector.

https://www.nbcnews.com/business/economy/january-jobs-revisions-trump-rcna258398

https://news.slashdot.org/story/26/02/11/1754240/us-had-almost-no-job-growth-in-2025