
Goose // she/they // college student // artist
311 posts
So Uh
So uh
I started trying to learn code
And also I have a Toyhou.se now so that’s why I started trying to learn code
Why is it so confusing to me like I feel like it should be easier, if anyone has any tips for learning code lemme know cuz one day I want to be able to code my own display and maybe a website to host my art and stuff :))
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quibbs126 liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Capngoosey
Another little page of doodles of my little Sonic skrunglies, this time including a robot and some lore

I was getting pretty fed up with links and generators with very general and overused weapons and superpowers and what have you for characters so:
Here is a page for premodern weapons, broken down into a ton of subcategories, with the weapon’s region of origin.
Here is a page of medieval weapons.
Here is a page of just about every conceived superpower.
Here is a page for legendary creatures and their regions of origin.
Here are some gemstones.
Here is a bunch of Greek legends, including monsters, gods, nymphs, heroes, and so on.
Here is a website with a ton of (legally attained, don’t worry) information about the black market.
Here is a website with information about forensic science and cases of death. Discretion advised.
Here is every religion in the world.
Here is every language in the world.
Here are methods of torture. Discretion advised.
Here are descriptions of the various methods used for the death penalty. Discretion advised.
Here are poisonous plants.
Here are plants in general.
Feel free to add more to this!
I really love my new pangolin Sonic oc so I just had to draw her more
I gave her a whole buncha outfits (she can only really wear crop tops so the cloth doesn’t get stuck in her gears)


I also decided to name her Hazard! I think she started calling herself that after her roboticization
reblog if your name isn't Amanda.
2,121,566 people are not Amanda and counting!
We’ll find you Amanda.
The Woman Behind The World’s Most Famous Tarot Deck Was Nearly Lost In History

For centuries, people of all walks of life have turned to tarot to divine what may lay ahead and reach a higher level of self-understanding.
The cards’ enigmatic symbols have become culturally ingrained in music, art and film, but the woman who inked and painted the illustrations of the most widely used set of cards today – the Rider-Waite deck from 1909, originally published by Rider & Co. – fell into obscurity, overshadowed by the man who commissioned her, Arthur Edward Waite.

Now, over 70 years after her death, the creator Pamela Colman Smith has been included in a new exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York highlighting many underappreciated artists of early 20th-century American modernism in addition to famous names like Georgia O’Keeffe and Louise Nevelson.
CNN