Machine Gun Girls 3 figure set, 1/35 scale models, by Modelkasten.
Machine Gun Girls 3 figure set, 1/35 scale models, by Modelkasten.
@soldmysoultobepretty I’m impressed with their upper body strength.
☠𝓣𝓱𝓮 𝓤𝓼𝓮𝓵𝓮𝓼𝓼☠
Some unused 3D models originally made for Act 3 of Catalist the heart.
Modeling: http://robopolis.tumblr.com/
bluedogeyes
Black Phoenix Project (via Art of Vitaly Bulgarov)
“Black Phoenix is a fictional military corporation that manufactures robots in a not-so-distant future. The idea is creating an album that would be full of designs that could represent a whole line of products from utility and semi-civilian drones to multi-purpose mobile weaponry systems and vehicles.
Black Phoenix Project is a collaboration with photographer Maria Skotnikova who is responsible for creating HDR Environment Maps that I used as lighting source as well as backplates. Visit Maria’s website here.”
zatannawayne
You will be very, very sorry…. Forever.
Gotham Adventures #26
This should be the new “is your Batman remotely like Batman” test. Can your version of Batman be caring enough to hold and care for a small child, yet still menace four criminals into surrendering, and even then still not be scary enough that a civilian can just go up to him and say “hey you holding that baby wrong, you clearly do not know what you’re doing. Let me help.” And he accepts her help, doesn’t try pretend he doesn’t need help because it’d hurt his image.
That’s Batman.
roboticreborn
Under my rule, the Underground’s problems are over, baby!
King Mettaton, Undertale (Neutral route, MTT ending)
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Cosplay, modeling, and editing by me.
Photography by my friend Ben.
Women in STEM of WWII - The real “Rosie Riveters”
In most countries women were not permitted to fight on the front lines of the war. Instead, they supported the war effort by learning, training and taking up jobs usually held by men.
These women did a lot more than rivet, they designed, built and tested thousands of aircraft in factories across Canada and the US. Prior to the war, women would have been mostly banned from taking up such jobs.
Sources: Library of Congress
Patients of surgeon Harold Gillies during WWI and WWII
Okay, these photographs pissed me off a bit, because they don’t show off how much of a genius Dr. Harold Gillies, the father of modern plastic surgery, was. Rhinoplasty, skin grafts, and facial reconstructions have been practised for centuries. However, it was this New Zealander surgeon who standardized these techniques and established the discipline of “plastic surgery.”
The introduction of more destructive weapons of WWI and WWII resulted in devastating injuries. In addition, in trench warfare, the head was more exposed than the rest of the body, and soldiers’ faces were often shattered or burnt beyond recognition. Despite the best efforts of surgeons, many soldiers were left hideously disfigured. Traditionally, the edges of facial wounds were simply stitched together, but when scar tissue contracted faces were left twisted and disfigured, so a new type of surgery was needed.
Gillies rebuilt faces using tissue from elsewhere in the body. Antibiotics had not yet been invented, meaning it was very hard to graft tissue from one part of the body to another because infection often developed, so Gillies invented the tubed pedicle,” where he used a flap of skin from the chest or forehead and “swung” it into place over the face. The flap remained attached but was stitched into a tube. This kept the original blood supply intact and dramatically reduced the infection rate. After many surgical construction, grafting, and healing, which could take months to years, the tentacle-like tubing would be removed, and (volia!) a new face!




He was also the first to do sex reassignment surgery from female to male in 1946, then male to female using a flap technique in 1951, which became the standard for 40 years.
mspaintadventuring
tl;dr, these were his patients BEFORE the surgery. He didn’t DISFIGURE these people he HELPED them.
worms-fear-god-god-fears-youth
This is amazing holy shit
Always a pleasure, and a humbling one, working from master Robert Valley’s designs. Unfortunately the designs themselves are not mine to post but here is a crude facsimile. These were for a proposed WWII show for the TV.
This was my version of The Avengers Tower.
The first shot was from Avengers #9, the second is from Avengers #7.
I think a lot of people assume I use 3d modeling in my drawings. I don’t!
The gray tones are done in photoshop, but the most technologically advanced tool I use in the drawing is a Rapidagraph pen.
I love architecture like most superhero artists love pecs.
Listen, I know we’re all aware of this, but hot damn Dustin Weaver is one massively talented genius.