illiustrate:

big ol dump of art:

- genga + key pose studies while browsing sakugabooru. i reallllly need to study animation for my job!
- life study drawings of my hand to touch up on draftsmanship
- some old rose quartz drawings from last year!
- i had a wonderful opportunity to freelance board for marvel’s spiderman a couple years ago while i was still on 2012 TMNT! i was very green when it came to boarding back then but i’m a bit fond of these drawings (i drew harry kind of handsome haha…) 

"You deserve someone who knows how to make things up to you after hurting you. Not someone who is very good with just the word, “sorry.”"
- (via love-diaries)

(via love-diaries)

"I’ll never see her again, except for every time I close my eyes for the rest of my life. She’s the kind of ghost that never really goes away."
- from an unfinished story #914 (via thoughts-into-ink)
"Your path may be different to your family, friends, and country. But despite what they may think, it does not mean that you are going in the wrong direction."
- Chamtrul Rinpoche (via lazyyogi)

(Source: lazyyogi, via lazyyogi)

fromthehandsofquacks:
“ Photographs of William W. Keen’s successful operation to remove a brain tumor from a 26-year old patient, 1887. The patient was a carriage maker who exhibited symptoms of severe headaches, seizures, and partial blindness; he...

fromthehandsofquacks:

Photographs of William W. Keen’s successful operation to remove a brain tumor from a 26-year old patient, 1887. The patient was a carriage maker who exhibited symptoms of severe headaches, seizures, and partial blindness; he also had a history of a head injury and was prone to aphasia.

Owing to Keen’s demands at that proper antiseptic measures were taken for the operation (including removing the carpet and cleaning walls and ceiling), the tumor was removed after a two hour operation. Despite some complications with wound closure and cerebrospinal fluid leak, the patient lived for thirty years, even donating his brain to his surgeon for anatomical study.

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1918.


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