I upload COMICS every Monday, Wednesday and Friday over there, plus other days sometimes when I have stuff to share. And I have BIG plans for this year, including some brand new, fully colored comics!
5$ tier gets access to all my finished comics, comic pages and illustrations. 10$ gets access to all wips, sketches, progress vids and more. 12$ gets everything PLUS voting rights on anything I need to decide (who will fuck whom? what am I working on next? should I finish something or nah?) 50$ gets everything, double votes PLUS a sketch page of their choosing EVERY MONTH (can even be a comic page if u want)
I love pages like this, it gives me the same warm fuzzy feeling I get from reading books like the Lord of the Rings series, everyone bringing something to the journey.
I love pages like this, it gives me the same warm fuzzy feeling I get from reading books like the Lo
Ooh! I don't know the traditions in this setting, but, in our world, the guy in the foreground is dismounting his horse on the wrong side. As I was told the first time I rode a horse, left is right and right is wrong.
Ooh! I don't know the traditions in this setting, but, in our world, the guy in the foreground is d
I was taught the same, and I never questioned why until now xD so after a short google it seems to be just a made up rule originating back in the english cavalry (ppl wore a sword on the left side so it was easier to swing the right leg) but you can mount and dismount on any side and nothing will happen.
I was taught the same, and I never questioned why until now xD so after a short google it seems to b
Thanks. I was going to say that I had never been informed of a specific reason for it but I thought about how 90% of all people are right-handed and Cavalry personnel wore their swords on the left side of their hips to make it easier to draw and use the sword. So, mounting and dismounting a horse from the left side prevented potential problems with the sword. Eventually, it just became a tradition. It's also one of the reasons that, most of the time, horses are faced in the same direction when they are stopped before dismounting. If the guy in the foreground dismounted on the left side of the horse, he'd bump into the guy right behind him.
Thanks. I was going to say that I had never been informed of a specific reason for it but I thought