maggins:
He was silent for a long moment, before his eyes grew wide. “Is that…me?”
Belle bit her lip hard. “I—I was just…i-it was only a character study,” she stammered, leaning back and wringing her hands in her apron where she stood. “I thought it might help me develop my skill if I…I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to offend you, I d-didn’t expect you to—”
“I’m not offended,” he said quietly, and Belle could tell he was sincere. He continued to stare at the portrait, a small smile growing over his face before he looked back up at her. “Do you really think I would have looked like that?”
➥ chapter 9 of “Mirrors” , by @greensearcher
captn-sara-holmes:
apitnobaka:
green pen for biologicky stuff. blue for not biologics. yellow for friend lines. and pink for ‘people that are not married but might as well be married.’
(from this awesome fic, Counterpart by sara_holmes.)
OKAY I scrambled to reblog so fast that I got my leg caught in my chair and missed the edge of the table and ended up staggering to the floor in an ungainly heap. BUT I DON’T CARE. This is perfect - look at Arto’s stupid adorable little face and the stick men that Clint drew before Steve took over, and the lines are all perfect -gasps- thank you SO much!!
thenamesmadlibbs:
One of the sketch commissions I did from sl comic con that I liked so I added some color. BB Groot!
andrewgarfield-daily:
I think one of the amazing things about Spider-Man is that you don’t see skin color when he’s in the suit. You don’t see any religious beliefs. You don’t see any denominations. Everyone can project themselves into that suit. It’s incredibly powerful in that way. So of course I think it’s important that the openness, the casting, in terms of who could be Spider-Man, could be absolutely anyone. A hero is a hero, whether you’re a man, woman, gay, lesbian, straight, black, white or red all over — it doesn’t matter.