ironfries:

what is this costume accuracy you speak of 8)a

cakegun answered: costume swap of the Avengers?

well if this is what you mean by costume swap, i hope you’re okay with my choices muahaha

famosity14:

More Tangled sketches from class….. I should really attempt to work on actual things when in class

famosity14:

More Tangled sketches from class….. I should really attempt to work on actual things when in class

bexesyearofbooks:

Spirit Bear by Bruce Barcott, National Geographic
Did you know that there is such a thing as a white black bear?  No, it’s not an albino and no, I don’t think there are black polar bears (although I could be wrong), it is a recessive fur-color  gene in the Black Bear species.  It takes two white fur genes to get a  white black bear, just like it takes two blue eye genes for a person to  have blue eyes.  The white Black bear, or Kermode bear, or Spirit bear,  or mooksgm’ol, as one of the First Nations in the British Columbia area  call them, are almost exclusively found in a very small section of the  province.
They’ve abounded there untouched for centuries because the native  people never hunted the Spirit Bear and they never let on that they even  existed.  These bears were never talked about outside the area.   Therefore, European fur trappers never caught wind of the rare and  elusive bear and never ventured that far west to turn the poor bruins  into coats or rugs.
This is a great and informative article.  It is well written and  keeps your attention.  Also it’s a real interesting topic.  Who knew  that there was a rare colored bear residing in the wilds of British  Columbia?

bexesyearofbooks:

Spirit Bear by Bruce Barcott, National Geographic

Did you know that there is such a thing as a white black bear?  No, it’s not an albino and no, I don’t think there are black polar bears (although I could be wrong), it is a recessive fur-color gene in the Black Bear species.  It takes two white fur genes to get a white black bear, just like it takes two blue eye genes for a person to have blue eyes.  The white Black bear, or Kermode bear, or Spirit bear, or mooksgm’ol, as one of the First Nations in the British Columbia area call them, are almost exclusively found in a very small section of the province.

They’ve abounded there untouched for centuries because the native people never hunted the Spirit Bear and they never let on that they even existed.  These bears were never talked about outside the area.  Therefore, European fur trappers never caught wind of the rare and elusive bear and never ventured that far west to turn the poor bruins into coats or rugs.

This is a great and informative article.  It is well written and keeps your attention.  Also it’s a real interesting topic.  Who knew that there was a rare colored bear residing in the wilds of British Columbia?