historicus-lykanthropos -> paleolithic-dogman
werewolf has so much versatility as a gender label. werewolf can mean a hairy trans person in the same way that bear means a hairy gay man. werewolf can be its own gender. werewolf can be a modifier to another gender like how butch can be a modifier. the possibilities are endless
LET me on the bed i promise i wont lay on top of you and squish u under my big dog weight please ple please please let me up i promise i'll lay only on a fair amount of bed for me and not take up all the space :3 please pleas (lying)
hello hello hello hello hello Hello hi hello hello hello hey hello HI hello hai ... u smell f unny ..
every day of my life i scream and cry and throw up bc i dont have this jumper
He’s gunna getchu.
Find me on Instagram too at Instagram.com/mightypaintbrush
Etruscan black-figure wolfman by the so-called Tityos painter (late 6th c. BC). Perhaps a depiction of the Etruscan god Calu, a cthonic entity — perhaps related to the Greek Hero of Temesa.
(Note the “armband”, poss. tattoo, for all Scott McCall fans)
Holcomb, not only are you a fantastic artist, but you're doing God's work (and I'm not even Christian)
Werewolf History Project- 80's Film
Ah, the 80’s… By that time, advancements in Special Effects and makeup FX allowed for filmmakers and creatives to really push the horror of transformation. Most notably Rick Baker’s award-winning work in An American Werewolf in London (1981) which set a new standard for effects and was the first film to ever win an academy award for best makeup. Rob Bottin, who went on to do the effects for John Carpenter’s The Thing (1982), also did groundbreaking work in The Howling (1981).
There’s also the Teen Wolf movie if that’s more your style.
for your consideration: physically disabled wolf. wheelchair, blood sugar monitor, cane, extending grabber; missing leg, eye, tail, paw... anything that suits your fancy!
098. wolf using a canine wheelchair !




