Tumgik
bishopstuff · 2 years
Text
Eddie Munson + Metallica - For Whom the Bell Tolls
Tumblr media
25 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 2 years
Text
Here is a free pdf of the players handbook
Here is a free pdf of xanathars guide to everything
Here is a free pdf to monsters manual
Here is a free pdf to tashas cauldron of everything
Here is a free pdf to dungeon master’s guide
Here is a free pdf to volo’s guide to monsters
Here is a free pdf of mordenkainen’s tomb of foes
For all your dnd purposes
223K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Actually, people are good by nature and you're a fool if you think otherwise.
124K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
59K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Some of my favorite interpretations of Dick Grayson/Nightwing:
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Nightwing drawings by Nick Robles: I love the stylized version here. Sharp and crisp and very intense. Nick is pretty known for his relationship with drawing the sexiest Jason Todd, but I think his work is incredible all around. A perfect example are these works of Nightwing 🤩
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Gabriel Picolo has always been one of my favorite artists. I own prints of his and my icon on my main is his work. This version of Dick is more cartoonish to fit with the Titans theme and him being younger. He generally draws Dick as being pretty serious, but his relationship pics with Starfire are the cutest 💞
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Here we have the master. The man known for his Nightwing and his pictures have become the most popular portrayal of Dick Grayson. Travis Moore loves Nightwing and you can tell. His art is the most popular seen when referencing the hero. Where would we be with the main Nightwing stan giving us these amazing works.
These👏artists👏understood👏the👏assignment 👏
1K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
One for DuckerZ, one for a dumbass
Tumblr media
45 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
"A rooster flies over the nest with an egg in hand."
I've been Cleanbois trash for 3 months now and it's been a lovely experience learning about crime
83 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
drake?
456K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
1d20 Phobias To Give Your D&D Character...
Aphenphosmphobia or Haphephobia: Fear of being touched.
Arachnophobia: Fear of spiders.
Astraphobia: Fear of storms, thunder and lightning.
Autophobia: Fear of being alone.
Aviophobia or Aviatophobia: Fear of flying.
Batophobia: Fear of heights or being close to high buildings.
Claustrophobia: Fear of confined spaces.
Dementophobia: Fear of insanity.
Entomophobia: Fear of insects.
Frigophobia: Fear of the Cold.
Hierophobia: Fear of priests or sacred things.
Necrophobia: Fear of death or dead things.
Nyctophobia: Fear of the dark or of night.
Ochlophobia: Fear of crowds or mobs.
Ommetaphobia: Fear of Eyes.
Phonophobia: Fear of sound or loud noises.
Pnigophobia or Pnigerophobia: Fear of choking of being smothered.
Pyrophobia: Fear of fire.
Thalassophobia: Fear of open or deep water.
Xyrophobia: Fear of razors.
722 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
There’s literally nothing funnier than this in the world
92K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Ranbooboo.png
76 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Local pyro realizes she is a walking ad for McDonalds 
8 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Adding some from my own experience as a recurve archer!
= Another difference with recurve and compound bows is the poundage being pulled back. More poundage = more force on the arrow, however also means more strength needed in pulling the string back. For recurve, the minimum is 15lbs (before the arrow just bounces off your target from the poundage being so weak) and roughly a max of approx 80lb (Before that just becomes way to  dangerous for your muscles to manage). For recurves, from the moment you pull back the string to the second you let go, you are holding X amount of pounds consistently for every arrow! That can be especially exerting if you are pulling back higher poundage. For compounds, they are pulling the X pounds till the gears kick in to help. This is why compounds are hard to pull initially, but suddenly become quite weightless to pull back during the climax. 
= On top of poundage, when writing take into consideration the exertion archers put themselves through. If they are pulling a higher poundage and aren’t adapted/trained for that, they will burn out quickly. Their accuracy will worsen and their performance will falter. Depending as well on their stamina, the amount of arrows an archer has used can indicate when they are getting tired. I can shoot roughly 120 arrows before I get tired, but with practicing endurance/stamina you can prevent getting tired quicker. 
- Some archers also have stabilizers which sit just below the handle. They’re like long poles that stick outwards to stabilize the arrow when it’s released. When the archer releases the arrow, the bow will tip forward in an arch due to the weight of the stabilizer. 
- Often with stabilizers, archers will also have a sling around the index and thumb of the hand holding the bow’s grip. Depending on your coach or style of shooting, archers don’t always grip their bow’s as the term implies. They actually just loosely hold the box in their hand. When the arrow is released and the stabilizer tips the bow hold, the sling between the index and thumb catches the bow to prevent it from falling out of your grip. 
- A clicker is a little stick the rests over the tip/neck of your arrow and is connected usually to the sight attachment (though not always). Its purpose is to let you know when to let go so that you maintain a consistent drawback length. This way you aren’t pulling the arrow back too little or too much. If you pull back too much you can be overpowering your arrow causing it to fly much higher then the target, and if you don’t pull back enough the arrow will be lower then the target and weaker.
- When you release an arrow, the fingers you are holding the string with should draw backwards and touch your shoulder/head region (Ex. Right hand dominant should touch right shoulder, vice versa). If you don’t when you release the arrow and your fingers flick out (instead of in towards the shoulder/side of the head) your arrow will actual wobble as if flies and you’ll end up losing that straight shot. (Watch yt videos of professional competitive archers and you’ll see what I mean! They REALLY like touching their shoulder or dragging their hand across their face) 
- One last thing! Archers are not always silent creature! Depending on how many arrows you have in your quiver or knickknacks strapped to you, you can be very noisy when moving (especially when jogging). The arrows jostle around and many of them are hollow so they tend to clatter a lot! When I walk around, I tend to hold my arrows as I move to keep them from making noise.
Archery information for writers that no one asked for but probably some of you need and I like talking about archery, so here it is.
when you put an arrow on the string, the verb is called “nocking” i.e. eyes glued on the target, he nocked the arrow
also the part of the arrow that gets put onto the string is called the nock. depending on the type of arrow this can be a piece of plastic glued into the arrow, or with wood or bamboo arrows it can be carved into the shaft of the arrow itself
you do not close an eye when aiming or shooting; you see better with both eyes open.
everyone has a dominant eye that more naturally your brain focuses with. that determines whether you are right or left handed when shooting, and doesn’t necessarily correlate to whether the person is right or left handed in anything else
so if you’re writing a character who has difficulty seeing out of one eye, take that into account when they are shooting
if they are right eye dominant, they hold the bow with their left hand and draw the string with their right. if they are left eye dominant, they hold the bow with their right hand and draw the string with their left
if they shoot left, the quiver sits on their left side/hip/thigh. shoot right - right side quiver.
there are several different ways to draw, if you are writing something historical or in a specific region, then do research on that style of archery. but for a generic place to start that is a more universal way of drawing a bow, here are some things to include
the chin stays down. raising your chin will fuck up your aim
the pointer finger on your draw hand rests on the side of your chin/jaw, and the string of the bow will touch the tip of the archer’s nose
weight is on the balls of your feet, leaning slightly forward off your heels
if it is an older bow/barebow, there is not usually a place for the arrow to rest on the bow. this means the arrow rests on the archer’s hand. if they are not wearing a glove on that hand, the fletchings (that’s the feathers on the arrow) will more than likely slice their hand when firing. this scars.
so if you’re wanting to describe someone observing and archer’s hands (hands are hot, don’t @ me) they would see a silver scar about halfway between the pointer finger knuckle and palm of the person’s hand. (turn your hand vertical and trace down the length of your pointer toward your thumb and stop next to the knuckle. that spot there.)
most archers wear something to protect their fingers on the hand that draws the bow. even with that, they have callouses. without it, a lot of callouses, scars, and blisters.
most common draw uses three fingers on the string: pointer, middle, ring. the arrow sits between the pointer and middle. just like where the draw point is, this is not universal and do research if you’re doing something culturally important.
barebow means that the bow is bare of any instruments. no sight, no weights, etc. the most basic/traditional form of bow
a recurve bow is anything where the tips of the bow curve back around forward, away from the archer
a compound is what you think of as a modern hunting bow, and is recognisable by having wheels at the ends and three strings
arrows have three fletchings that form a triangle, the point faces the archer so that the flat of the arrow will pass the flat of the bow on release. the arrow sits on the side of the bow facing the archer
archers with a larger/raised chest will sometimes where a chest protect so that the string does not catch when firing (this is regardless of gender, i know several cis-men who need it as well)
string can also catch on the forearm that is holding the bow and creates bruises and welts if you don’t wear a protector. modern ones are small plastic and cover just the spot, with elastic holding it in place. traditional ones are leather and wrap all the way around, lacing up on the back of your arm like a corset.
there is literally so much more, but i feel like this is plenty to get you started, and as always, feel free to drop an ask in my box if you need something more!
35K notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Angry merfolk attacks old lady who looked at her parrot wrong
4 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
My art style changes everyday ahaha :))
6 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
It was in this scene that I realized I related to Alex so much. Every group has to have that one sad, tired and stressed mum friend and that boys is me.
Tumblr media
47 notes · View notes
bishopstuff · 3 years
Text
Hold up, when Luke says they’ve been trying for years to play at the Orpheum the only thing my dumb ass is imagining is this 
Tumblr media
29 notes · View notes