Everything about your art was amazing, until I saw you ship DabiHawks đ¤Ž
Sorry for your loss
if youâve ever wondered what itâs like to live in the midwest, this is it.Â
Nightwing: âAw, theyâre bonding.â
Wally: âWanna bet on who's gonna win?â
Nightwing: â... sure!â
original sound
The homoerotic relationship between a sword and its scabbard
A representation of my thought process at all times
I didnât. I didnât want to be this person. But Aziraphale is sitting RIGHT THERE looking like A TOTALLY RESPECTABLE Roman citizen circa 40 AD. Maybe the hair might be unusual, but the Romans LOVED blonde hair. They thought it was cool and foreign and exotic in sort of a sexy way.
But Crowley is so historically confused. And I think the production design is too good and Neil Gaiman is too on top of his game for this to be accidental. It must mean something.Â
What is on your head Crowley. Are you the emperor? Are you a victorious general currently participating in a victory parade?Â
Sure, you sometimes see laurel wreathes in portraits. But FUNERAL portraits.
That crown is a symbolic thing, to celebrate your victories in life. Itâs not STREET WEAR.Â
And okay. Itâs 40-41 AD. Caligula is emperor. Military chic is in. If youâre a guy, youâre wearing your hair short and un-styled (LIKE AZIRAPHALE.) Those dramatic little spit curls wouldnât show up until at least Nero.Â
But actually, pulling back for a second - are you appreciating the absurdity that is this hairstyle? Because it took me a second to notice that only the FRONT HALF is curled.
Which is a Roman hairstyle. But itâs a Roman LADY hairstyle.Â
(It tends to get called âFlavian Hairâ because the Flavian era ladies of the 70s-90s got pretty extreme about it, but you still had less⌠dramatic versions in the 40s.)
Thatâs you, Crowley. Thatâs your style reference. Honestly, if you had just kept your hair long everybody would have thought you were a cool barbarian chieftain or something.Â
The black is fine. Itâs eccentric, but fine. Romans wore black. Wearing black was Cato the Youngerâs *thing.* It gets associated with mourning and/or protest, but it would have been really visually confusing to have Crowley wear some other color. This gets a pass.
Nope, my question is about his articles of clothing. Thereâs a charcoal grey garment that seems to be a toga + undershirt. Itâs looped over Crowleyâs arm, which is a classic toga give away.Â
That partâs fine. But over the top, heâs wearing a true black⌠short cape? Shawl? itâs really hard to tell, because whatever it is, he is NOT wearing it correctly (is it folded in half?) Also, that irregular red zigzag pattern is very strange and I do not recognize it from anywhere. Seriously, I canât even decide on a continent for this garment.
Emperor Nero usually gets credit for inventing the first sunglasses, after he started watching gladiators fight though a green gemstone. He wonât be emperor for about ten years. But hey, he probably got the idea from somewhere. And dark glasses are just a really sensible way to hide your snakey eyes. This is also the first time we see Crowley put up some proper emotional barriers, so itâs a good place for the glasses to be introduced. (@theladyzephyr has a wonderful meta that goes into a lot more detail here.)Â
So the sunglasses are good. BUT THAT BROOCH.
Okay. This is Aziraphale wearing a fibula plate brooch
Itâs a really Roman style, and a really Roman shape (a âpeltaâ)
Iâve never seen one that looks like angel wings, but a Roman citizen is going to look at that and see a soppily patriotic Imperial Eagle. How nice that this lovely man from Germania/Greece has made some money and become such an exemplary citizen!
But Crowley is wearing a penannular (pin-and-ring) brooch
Thatâs not roman. Thatâs a style from the British Isles (Irish, Pictish, Scottish, Welsh.) It says barbarian, boonies, outskirts of the civilized world.Â
And nobody @ me with pictures of pin-and-ring brooches from Rome. Those are small, cheap, and undecorated. Theyâre the cultural equivalent of safety pins. This is patterned like a snake, and itâs the size of Crowleyâs palm.Â
AND THATâS ANOTHER THING. They didnât do snake-themed jewelry in the British isles. Snakes didnât have the best cultural associations there, and there werenât too many of them there to begin with. This isnât something Crowley picked up because âhey, a snake, cool,â and then got attached too. This must have been commissioned special.Â
But you know who LOVED snake jewelry?Â
ROMANS.Â
Romans associated snakes with healing and rebirth - clinics sometimes had lil snakes crawling around on the ground to give the place good vibes.Â
You cannot tell me that Crowley could have existed in Rome for any length of time and not picked up some of this jewelry. Which leads me to my conclusion:
The unfashionable pin and hair? The clothing draped the wrong way? The cultural colorblindness of wearing a laurel crown when youâre not supposed to? Crowley looks like a tacky tourist because he is one. Heâs not staying here long, he âjust nipped in for a quick temptation.â
Heâs in a bad mod because heâs had an awful day, everyone keeps looking at him funny, the temptation was a complete bust, he has culture shock, and now heâs just trying to get a drink. But they donât have any PROPER drinks like ALE or MEAD here, so he just orders âwhateverâs drinkable.â Heâs even not sure what they drink in Rome.Â
But then Aziraphale shows up and invites him to lunch some place fashionable. So everythingâs going to be okay.
edward cullen but in the same tone as that mildly pissed off glasses wearing vape guy whose smoke trick got ruined
if i bring a book someplace it doesn't necessarily mean i want to read it mayb i just want to take her own a walk. Get her some fresh air and a change of scenery