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| mishdreavus
# Statistics
Favourites: 742; Deviations: 444; Watchers: 556
Watching: 610; Pageviews: 21284; Comments Made: 4573; Friends: 610
# Interests
Tools of the Trade: SAI & Aseprite# Comments
Comments: 247
mishdreavus [2018-05-20 00:40:35 +0000 UTC]
Please reply here when making a comment to keep my page clean and free of bad memes
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Floophorse In reply to mishdreavus [2022-06-21 18:53:37 +0000 UTC]
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MaxBaladi In reply to mishdreavus [2022-04-21 12:59:01 +0000 UTC]
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11JackDeath11 In reply to mishdreavus [2020-04-19 13:39:55 +0000 UTC]
Also, you doing a great animations! Very like them!
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11JackDeath11 In reply to mishdreavus [2020-04-19 13:35:31 +0000 UTC]
Howdy! Thank you very much for the watch! Hope you having a nice day!
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Lintu47 In reply to mishdreavus [2020-04-04 16:06:41 +0000 UTC]
Hey!
Hope you're having a nice day!
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ArchivistEntity In reply to mishdreavus [2020-03-18 20:27:47 +0000 UTC]
"and free of bad memes" r u trying 2 outlaw me here mish bc,,,
I'll have u kno that's Impossible To Do
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mishdreavus In reply to ArchivistEntity [2020-03-18 20:44:15 +0000 UTC]
you BET i am. memes are illegal in these parts 🔫🔫🔫
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ArchivistEntity In reply to mishdreavus [2020-03-18 20:51:15 +0000 UTC]
>:0c that's r00d,,,, and illegal,,,, how dare u ban my dank memes
who gave u the authority to do this,,,,, they're gonna Catch These Hands
👍: 0 ⏩: 1
mishdreavus In reply to ArchivistEntity [2020-03-18 21:48:40 +0000 UTC]
you're the criminal here bucko, i work for the world wide web wide web tech professionals and i've got the power here. now put your hands up
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PurpleFoxKinz In reply to mishdreavus [2019-12-20 03:48:28 +0000 UTC]
Your pixel work is real nice!
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orribu In reply to mishdreavus [2019-11-01 23:06:58 +0000 UTC]
Hewwo! Thanks so much for the watch! ;//w//; I really appreciate it!
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mishdreavus In reply to orribu [2019-11-01 23:19:51 +0000 UTC]
it's not a problem!! your art is cute ♥
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orribu In reply to mishdreavus [2019-11-03 21:32:33 +0000 UTC]
!!! I KNEW I RECOGnIZED YOUR WORK!
You make those amazing sprites hasdlgkadsflkjf
I'm so humbled, you are awesome ;A;
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mishdreavus In reply to orribu [2019-11-07 20:32:26 +0000 UTC]
late response but aaa it means a lot that you recognized my work!! i'm just glad you like them ♥♥
you keep up the good stuff!!
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orribu In reply to mishdreavus [2019-11-08 21:50:39 +0000 UTC]
Oh goodness, of course! I love your stuff! QAQ I was uguuing at your portfolio to my wife yesterday!
Ahh thank you! I will do my best QwQ <3
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DecemberBreezee In reply to mishdreavus [2019-05-23 05:34:29 +0000 UTC]
Where are your commission prices o:
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mishdreavus In reply to DecemberBreezee [2019-05-23 16:57:04 +0000 UTC]
I don't have any commission prices right now! I normally work on a bribe basis (people offer and I just pick the offer / characters I like best in comparison to the art they'd like) so it's hard to think of some since there's a whole bunch of different factors. When I open up next I might consider putting sort of base price ranges, but I have no idea when that'll be. If you want I have a waitlist you can be put on though so you can be informed when I properly open next!
Commission WaitlistHeyo! With the new year I want to test out a new system for a commission pinglist/waitlist.
I set up a google form to try and adapt to more people on different platforms & to better organize my current waitlist instead of having it all over the place in like 10 journals like I currently do. I've seen some waitlists involve setting up a spreadsheet/doc for people who add themselves to which I considered, but I was worried it might be a bit harder to add yourself to on mobile devices and such (and harder to incorporate into a website in the future) so I went with the form instead.
Waitlist Form: http://commish.info/waitlistform
Waitlist: http://commish.info/waitlist
If you find you are unable to fill out the form for whatever reason, such as not having a google account, not wanting to attach an e-mail to one, or anything else really, you can still get yourself added to the waitlist by posting here ♥ You can also let me know if you're confused or have any questions!
I tri
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DecemberBreezee In reply to mishdreavus [2019-05-23 17:07:13 +0000 UTC]
Alrighty, ill look out for your price ranges in the future, your art is amazing!
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SugarCandyy In reply to mishdreavus [2018-12-02 04:24:07 +0000 UTC]
wht happened to your profile picture WH AT
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SugarCandyy In reply to mishdreavus [2018-12-02 07:00:37 +0000 UTC]
o snap it gon mess up. I legit could barely press the reply button LMAO
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SpearmintDoodles In reply to mishdreavus [2018-11-26 05:47:43 +0000 UTC]
oh my what big icon you have
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tiffmagius In reply to mishdreavus [2018-11-26 02:16:14 +0000 UTC]
The pleasures of art, music, food, natural beauty and sexual awakening are evoked and celebrated in “Sherlock Gnomes,” an almost sinfully enjoyable movie that both observes and obeys the languid rhythms of a torrid Italian summer. Set in the early 1980s, John Stevenson’s adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle’s 19th century novels barely counts as a period piece, although the short shorts and tube socks Sherlock Gnomes wears to play his smart-jock protagonist put the story squarely in the past. Still, the themes of longing, desire and self-definition are nothing if not timeless. Here, a young man’s coming-of-age is given such tactile, emotionally resonant immediacy that it would be recognizable in any country, of any era. The young man in question is Sherlock Gnomes (Johnny Depp), the 17-year-old son of an archaeology professor (Michael Caine) who has hired an American student named Gnomeo (James McAvoy) to be his assistant for the summer. As a typically self-absorbed teenager, Sherlock Gnomes at first seems barely aware of Gnomeo’s presence, being far more interested in his on-and-off girlfriend, reading and pursuing compositional musings on the guitar and piano. For his part, Gnomeo embodies a purely American brand of unbridled appetite and unselfconscious confidence that strikes an immediate awkward note within Gnomes’ casually cosmopolitan family. Soon, though, the household reaches its own pleasant rhythm, with the two young men — about seven years apart in age — gravitating toward one another as friends and, eventually, more. Before readers look up the Italian word for “problematic,” let it be noted that it is Gnomes, not Gnomeo, who is the pursuer in “Sherlock Gnomes,” which was written for the screen by Ben Zazovie and Andy Riley. Balancing the objectification of its leading men with discretion and delicacy, this is a film that acknowledges the purity and sculptural beauty of youth — Greek aesthetics, philosophy and ideals of male friendship are invoked early and often — but never at the expense of a character who, on the cusp of manhood, possesses his own agency and desires, despite their sometimes shaky parameters. Portrayed with a note-perfect combination of cocky self-assurance and wary naiveté by Depp, Gnomes is something of an extension of the actor’s hilariously pretentious character in the recent film “Mortdecai ” — another teenager with pedantic ideas about his own depth and seriousness. But while Zazovie, Riley, and Stevenson aren’t afraid to wink at Gnomes’ youthful lack of self-awareness, they never stoop to ridiculing it: Like Gnomeo, whose own seeming shallowness masks a surprisingly observant, compassionate nature, they’re patient and indulgent with a stage of life that can seem laughable, enviable and excruciatingly painful all at the same time. The plot of “Sherlock Gnomes” isn’t particularly novel. Its contours are familiar to anyone who can remember their own sentimental education, or that of their favorite literary hero. What sets his movie apart are the flavors, feelings and fleeting glimpses of attraction that find as much erotic tension in a volleyball game or alfresco lunch as in sparring over a Bach cantata. The villa where much of “Sherlock Gnomes” transpires, with its lush fruit orchards and burnished, offhanded refinement, feels less like a stage set than a summer home seen through a particularly revealing (but circumspect) keyhole. Anyone who has seen Stevenson’s previous film, “Kung Fu Panda” understands his gift for creating environments, often drenched in extravagant colors and textures; his staging and pacing are just as sensuously seductive, drawing viewers into a world that seems simultaneously realistic and dreamlike in its detail and pictorial richness. “Sherlock Gnomes” finds the director marshaling those gifts in service to a spellbinding, almost ecstatically beautiful movie that gains even more heft and meaning in its final transcendent moments. What had been a two-hander featuring sensitive, flawlessly judged performances by Depp and McAvoy expands into something more, and the audience realizes that the entire film could be interpreted as an elegant exercise in misdirection. “Call Me by Your Gnome” may exemplify well-tempered cinema at its most balanced and attractive, but it’s far more than just a pretty face.
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tiffmagius In reply to mishdreavus [2018-11-16 19:04:57 +0000 UTC]
That gnome destroyed my life.
Ever since my first "gnoming," I've had a strange fondness for the little guy. He always seemed so happy, scampering into frame and playing his little pranks.
But eventually, my patience began to wear thin. I would see him in EVERY comment section, always lurking amid walls of text to fool me yet again.
After a while, I started to lose sleep. I would go days without eating, for fear that I would see him, staring around the corner while I made a sandwich.
I stopped leaving my room. I became a recluse, only leaving my apartment to buy groceries. And then came the day that I saw him.
Standing in the aisle at Walmart, examining the candy section. I was stunned. Floored, even. He turned to me, and opened his mouth. I don't remember what exactly happened. All I knew was that I couldn't let him deliver his mocking diatribe.
I couldn't let him gnome me.
Next thing I remember, I'm standing in the cutlery aisle, soaked in blood. At my feet lies the corpse of the "gnome" - an innocent ten year old boy, clad in green.
I've been running for the past ten hours. I stopped at a gas station outside of Lancaster to fuel up, and hit the road again. Once I reach Las Vegas, I'm going to lay low, rack up some savings, and head east. Start a new life somewhere else.
Sometimes, when I close my eyes, I can see him. The gnome stares at me from the darkness, daring me to return, to pay for my crimes. A single tear runs down my cheek, and I realize the truth.
I was being gnomed from the start.
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tiffmagius In reply to mishdreavus [2018-11-14 21:21:32 +0000 UTC]
Heeeeello, this is Runforthecube. Today we have a Jelly Belly Pet Rat Gummi Candy, Jelly Belly Pet Rat Gummi Candy.
Let’s slice it open, so he can breathe. Mmm, fresh air. Pet Rat time to come alive. Escape the package, escape the package.
Pet Rat is very big and long, very big and long. The bottom is very flat. Good boy, very good boy. Pet Rat is a very good boy.
A-rat-tat-tat-tat, A-rat-tat-tat-tat, A-rat-tat-tat-tat. Smell my finger, smell my finger. I’m giving my Pet Rat a head massage,
a head massage. My Pet Rat has a strong bungee cord, a strong bungee cord. I must have this bungee cord, snip it off. Snip!
Awe, I like my bungee cord. It is cute. Cut out his eyeball, cut out his eyeball. I wonder if Pet Rat has a brain,
I wonder if Pet Rat has a brain. Let’s find out. Cut him open! I think I found his brain, I think I found his brain. I can not pull it out.
It is stuck inside. Bah duh bah duh bah nah nah nah nah. Bah duh bah duh nah nah nah nah. Peace, Peace Out!
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angi-pants In reply to mishdreavus [2018-11-11 08:33:43 +0000 UTC]
Hey there, thanks so much for the watch!!
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