m_findlow: (Jack mad)
m_findlow ([personal profile] m_findlow) wrote in [community profile] fan_flashworks2026-03-20 07:48 pm

Torchwood: Fanfic: False trail

Title: False trail
Fandom: Torchwood
Characters: Jack, Ianto
Author: m_findlow
Rating: PG
Length: 915 words
Content notes: None
Author notes: Written for Challenge 509 - Plant
Summary: Jack knew there was a reason why everything felt slightly off.

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conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2026-03-20 04:22 am

(no subject)

Dear Carolyn: My friends think I’m stupid. I’m a high school junior, and I go to a highly academically competitive school, where it is expected by my peers that you are supposed to take at least three AP classes. My closest friends are taking five. They are constantly stressed, overworked and burned out. My peers believe the only way to get into a “good” college (whatever that means) is to take as many AP classes as possible and to get the highest SAT score as possible. This, I know, is ridiculous on so many levels, but I stay out of it.

Lately, however, my friends have been shaming me for only taking one AP class, and for taking one standardized test vs. the other. I am going to college for musical theater, and admissions for those programs rely primarily on auditions, not grades. So why on earth would I put myself through so much stress if it won’t affect my college admissions? I’ve tried to explain this to my friends, but they think they know better than I. Additionally, they equate my taking only one AP class with being stupid. In the AP class I do take, my friend consistently shuts down and mocks my ideas with her other friends.

I’ve tried to mention the reasons I don’t take too many hard classes, but it’s like talking to a wall. I’ve also explained that since I was diagnosed with ADHD a year ago, I am now more aware of what I can handle. When all else failed, I even mentioned once that I have an IQ of 135 (tested when I was diagnosed with ADHD). I am actually quite smart. My friends stared at me and said, “Yeah… I think they lied to you.”

This hurts my feelings and happens so often that I’ve even started to believe I am stupid, despite all evidence to the contrary. Now I’ve started subconsciously playing into the “token dumb friend” stereotype because that is all I’m surrounded with. Should I not respond and ignore it?
— Stupidly Smart


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swan_tower: (Default)
swan_tower ([personal profile] swan_tower) wrote2026-03-20 08:08 am
Entry tags:

New Worlds: The Questionable Art of Forgery

Forgery: where art and crime intersect.

Not all kinds of forgery are art, of course. When my fourteen-year-old self forged my father's signature on my practice records to assure my band director that yes, of course I practiced at home as much as I was supposed to, there was no art involved there. (Rather the opposite, in fact.) I suppose you could argue that mimicking someone's handwriting is calligraphic forgery, but that feels to me like it's stretching the point. Counterfeiting we've already talked about separately, in the first year of this Patreon; the manufacture of fake IDs or other legal documents, or of something like knockoff Gucci purses, are also not the focus of this essay.

No, here we're concerned with the creation of fake objects of art, whether works attributed to a specific artist, or anonymous artifacts of a particular place and time. And this is a topic I find fascinatingly squirrelly.

The techniques necessary to pull this off have gotten increasingly sophisticated over time. Back in the day -- or even now, if you're selling to a credulous enough fool -- anything that passed muster to a casual glance might suffice. Get yourself a fresh sheet of parchment, papyrus, or paper, write or draw on it, apply some physical and chemical stresses to make it look old, and you're good to go. Fire a pot or clay figure, or carve something out of stone, then batter it around for that authentic chipped look. Maybe even stamp out an ancient coin or two, if it's a piece rare enough to be worth substantially more than its metal content.

These days, it's not nearly that simple. We have carbon dating, spectroscopic analysis, and other high-tech methods of determining whether some detail is out of place. Which doesn't mean forgeries have gone away; it just means that talented forger needs to know a lot more than just what their proposed artifact should look like. There's a thriving market in blank fragments of ancient papyrus -- so the substrate will pass an age check even if what's written on it is new -- and who knows what texts have been scraped off bits of parchment, what paintings have been covered or rubbed away, so something more lucrative can be put in their place. The best forgers need to know the chemistry of inks and paints, how to make the right tools, the techniques used back then, so that only the closest analysis by the most skilled experts can spot the fake.

Nor is it only about the object itself. These days, we also pay a lot of attention to provenance: the history of an object's ownership, which can help to prove that it wasn't made last week. (A very similar term, provenience, is used in archaeology to refer to where the object was found: relevant to sifting out illegally looted objects from those excavated under legitimate conditions.) Of course, if you want to pass off a fake as the real thing, you also have to forge a provenance -- hence the massive upswing after World War II in items that had been the property of an "anonymous Swiss collector," a fig leaf to cover Nazi theft and forgeries alike.

That's when you're just trying to make a Twelfth Dynasty Egyptian ushabti or a bronze ornament from Sanxingdui: a plausible example of a type, but nothing more specific than that. When you're trying to pass something off as a previously-unidentified Picasso or Rodin, then you can't hide behind the expected variations between different nameless historical artisans; you have to mimic not just the materials but the ideas, composition, and execution of that specific person -- well enough that it seems like it could have genuinely been their work.

And at that point, you very nearly have a Zen koan on your hands: if someone forges a Rembrandt so well it can't be told from the real thing, is there a meaningful difference? Is the art itself what's worthwhile, or the fact that it was made by a specific person?

The answer to that really depends on context. If I'm a layperson who likes Caravaggio's style of painting, and somebody else comes along who paints just like Caravaggio (without claiming those are his works), I might be delighted to acquire things of the exact type I like for a fraction of the cost. Yay for pretty art! By contrast, if a forger lies to me and I pay Caravaggio prices for something that doesn't suffer from the scarcity of the artist being dead for centuries, I'm probably going to be pissed. And if I'm an art historian trying to learn more about Caravaggio, that forger has actively poisoned the well of scholarship by introducing false data.

Some of our "forgery" problems now actual stem from situations more like that first example. You can buy a million and one plastic replicas of Michaelangelo's David in Florence, and nobody thinks of those as forgeries . . . but rewind a few centuries or millennia, and those replicas had to be hand-crafted out of marble or bronze or whatever suited the sculpture being copied. That wasn't forgery; it was just how art got replicated, and the best copyists were deploying a useful, legitimate skill. The same was true of paintings. Now, however, the interests of both scholarship and the aura of owning a verified-as-legitimate original mean we have to sort that historical wheat from the chaff.

Or take the workshop context in which many Renaissance artists operated. Apprentices were expected to mimic their master's style, and if the result was good enough, the master was free to sell those works under his (or, more rarely, her) own name. Again, nowadays we strive to separate those out from the authentic works of the master -- but that reflects a modern attitude where the individual genius is the most important thing, above whether it reflects their style or was made under their auspices.

Some forgeries are extremely famous. Han Van Meegeren had to out himself as a forger when he was accused of collaboration for selling a Vermeer to the Nazi Hermann Göring; to prove that he hadn't hocked a piece of cultural patrimony, he painted another one while court-appointed witnesses stood and watched. The Getty Museum in Los Angeles has spent quite a bit of money trying to prove the disputed authenticity of a kouros (a specific style of statue) they bought for seven million dollars, but the best they've been able to achieve is a label identifying it as "Greek, about 530 B.C., or modern forgery." The Boston Museum of Fine Arts similarly clings to the hope that their probably-fake "Minoan snake goddess" statuette might be the real thing.

One thing these forgeries have in common: the demand for the genuine article is high enough to make fakes worth the effort of their creation. Minoan snake goddesses got manufactured because Sir Arthur Evans' excavations at Knossos attracted a ton of publicity, and he was not particularly discriminating in buying the "discoveries" people brought to him. Few criminals bothered forging Indigenous art until collectors turned their attention toward those parts of the world, thereby creating demand. This can in turn come full circle: van Meegeren's post-trial fame made his paintings rise high enough in value that his own son wound up forging more of them.

Nobody knows for sure how many fakes are on display in museums, galleries, and private collections. Some estimates run very high, due to the way today's plutocrats treat the acquisition of art as an investment strategy and display of status, while others say that improved methods of detection and the emphasis on authenticating an object before somebody forks over millions for it have greatly reduced the incidence. We'll never really know for sure, because of the loss of face inherent in admitting you paid too much for a forgery -- including the cratering in value for other works that might become suspect by association. But if you want to tell a story of trickery and sordid doings, the art world is rife with possibility!

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/aYnVC2)
Smart Bitches, Trashy BooksSmart Bitches, Trashy Books ([syndicated profile] smartbitches_feed) wrote2026-03-20 06:00 am

710. Writing Characters with Chronic Illness (Plus Restaurant Recs!!) with Riss M. Neilson

Posted by SB Sarah

The Bridge Back to You
A | BN | K | AB
Riss M. Neilson joins me today to talk about her new romance, The Bridge Back to You. This is a second chance love story between two exes who unexpectedly inherit shares of the same restaurant – the restaurant that he runs, and that she kind of ran away from.

There is so much to discuss in this book: we talk about characters with chronic illnesses like endometriosis, or mental illnesses like OCD. We talk about the astrology of her characters and what insights she can gain from their charts, and then, she gives us a list of restaurants to try if we’re ever in Providence, Rhode Island. And Riss even expands my theory about which foods are the universal expression of human love.

Listen to the podcast →
Read the transcript →

Here are the books we discuss in this podcast:

You can find Riss M. Neilson on her website, RissMNeilson.comSubstack, and on Instagram.

We also mentioned:

And if you’re in Providence, Rhode Island, Riss recommends:

If you like the podcast, you can subscribe to our feed, or find us at iTunes. You can also find us on Stitcher, and Spotify, too. We also have a cool page for the podcast on iTunes.

Thanks to our sponsors:

More ways to sponsor:

Sponsor us through Patreon! (What is Patreon?)

What did you think of today's episode? Got ideas? Suggestions? You can talk to us on the blog entries for the podcast or talk to us on Facebook if that's where you hang out online. You can email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or you can call and leave us a message at our Google voice number: 201-371-3272. Please don't forget to give us a name and where you're calling from so we can work your message into an upcoming podcast.

Thanks for listening!


Podcast Sponsor

Support for this episode comes from Savage Bonds, book two in the Shadowmist Pack series by Evie Mitchell!

If you are looking for a body-positive slow burn romance with very spicy scenes, knotting, an emotional support glory hole, and shared psychic orgasms, listen up.

A gritty, paranormal shifter romance, Savage Bonds follows Lithia, the first female Beta of the Shadowmist Pack, after she is betrayed and imprisoned in a silver-lined torture facility.

Her only lifeline is a voice from the next cell: Kier, a nomad who has been held in isolation for three years. His sanity has been eroded after years of psychic assault, but when he connects with Lithia though a small hole in their shared prison wall, he finds an ally, and a reason to endure.

Together, they must navigate a brutal escape through a burning wilderness to the safety of her pack. And as the pack prepares to dismantle the organisation that imprisoned them, Lithia and Kier must decide if they are brave enough to claim a future built on more than just shared trauma.

While Savage Bonds is the second in the Shadowmist Pack series, it can be read as a near-standalone. One reviewer on Goodreads says, “I enjoyed this book even more than the first in the series! Lithia is my favorite. She’s such a baddie and I love her for it! The world building in this one is awesome too. If you like werewolf romance, this series is for you.”

And I think you need to know about the dedication from author E.V. Mitchell:

To the readers who saw a hole in a prison wall and immediately thought, “…yeah, I’d fist that.” You brave, horny disasters. You trauma-bonded, violence-inclined little gremlins. This book is for you.

Savage Bonds and the Shadowmist Pack series by E.V. Mitchell are available now in Kindle Unlimited, and in print on the author’s website, or in your local library – woohoo! Audiobooks are coming soon.

 

Remember to subscribe to our podcast feed, find us on iTunes or on Stitcher.
andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2026-03-20 02:30 am
Entry tags:

Photo cross-post


Nice mist on Arthur's Seat this morning.
Original is here on Pixelfed.scot.

pattrose: SallyMN (Sunflowers)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-20 12:20 am

Topics for talk March

Topics for talk:

Things I Need/Want to Control

I like being in control of myself and realized that if I can control myself, I wouldn't need as much help from other people. Ì like taking care of my own destiny.
pattrose: (Grumpy Cat1)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-20 12:19 am
Entry tags:

Jokes

Jokes

* Why are ghosts bad liars? They’re totally see-through.
* How do poets say hello? Haven’t we metaphor?
* RIP to boiling water... You will be mist.
* How does the ocean say hi? It waves.
* How did the art competition end? In a draw.
pattrose: 00 Starfleet Academy 1 (00 Starfleet Academy 1)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-20 12:17 am

90 discussion questions.

90 discussion questions.

1. When were you most outside of your comfort zone?

When I have to talk about things that bother me.

I'm not crazy with this focusing on myself all the time.
pattrose: (Iron man 2)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-20 12:15 am
Entry tags:

Seven days, seven book covers challenge

Seven days, seven book covers challenge.

Number 6.


pattrose: (Blair)
pattrose ([personal profile] pattrose) wrote2026-03-20 12:13 am

March Not quite 365 days questions

March, not quite 365 days, questions.

20. Was learning a new language part of your education when you were at school? Can you still remember any of it?

Yes, I took two years of Latin. And no, I don't remember any of it. I wish I had taken something more beautiful. I'm terrible at languages. I’m not even good with English.
thesleepingbeauty: &copy; <user site="livejournal.com" user name="lolzipopzz"> (stock | mermaid waters)
Cristi-Ann ([personal profile] thesleepingbeauty) wrote in [community profile] iconthat2026-03-19 09:43 pm

Challenge 202: celestial




Sailor Moon x6

links )
soc_puppet: A crude pencil drawing on lined paper of what's supposed to be a dog; the dog's mouth and eyes are on one side of its face, while its snout is on the other. (Gud at Drawings)
Socchan ([personal profile] soc_puppet) wrote in [community profile] newcomers2026-03-20 01:46 am

Dreamwidth and Icons

Buckle in, everyone, this is going to be a long one!

One of the things that has made Tumblr wildly popular with fandom is its unlimited image hosting capacity. Content, Tumblr eventually put limits on, but number of total images (rather than images per post) and size of images? Not so much.

Unfortunately, that's one of the big reasons why Tumblr is basically hemorrhaging money: Because data is expensive, and image data is much more so than text data, mainly because it's a lot more data. That number just goes up with gifs and videos, the former especially being a favorite on Tumblr.

The ways to get money to run a social media site on the internet are basically venture capitol (the investors will want their money back someday, somehow), selling user data (doesn't everyone love ads and hate privacy?), and users directly paying for services (in this economy?).

Dreamwidth started from a foundation of prioritizing privacy and user freedom, and that meant that they compromised on image hosting in order for their users to truly be the main focus of this site. A dedicated user base pays to keep Dreamwidth running, and while there's a price rise on the horizon, we've managed to keep Dreamwidth's doors open with just our own money for sixteen years now.

So what does this have to do with icons? Well, with the limited image hosting options in Dreamwidth's budget, they're one of the main ways we use images at all—and Dreamwidth users make the most of them!

Hold up; what exactly IS an icon? And what do you mean by 'make the most of them'? )

How do I get and upload icons? )

Is that it?

Well, it's everything I can think of, at any rate! But you might have questions that I haven't covered. This is a great place to ask them! I may not have the answers, but odds are decent that someone here will be able to point you in the right direction.

One last favor before I go...

Dreamwidth users, if you've got favorite icons, show them off in the comments! I think it would be great to be able to share examples of just how fun and creative we can get with this medium, and this seems like the perfect opportunity 😉 Reply to your own comment if you have more than one, or to other people if the icon fits, so it's not just a mass of top-level comments.

As for any newcomers, if this post gets enough comments, you may get a chance to try out another one of Dreamwidth's features; at 50 comments, comment threads will collapse to keep loading time down and limit data transfer costs. Towards the topmost comment, at the bottom of the comment below which everything gets folded up, there's a clickable option to Expand the thread. This will open up and display all of the comments below that for you! The thread will collapse back down if you click away, though.

If this post doesn't get that many comments but you still want to try it out, I'd recommend checking the latest post at [site community profile] dw_news. (Incidentally, if you have a Paid account, there's an option to expand all the comment threads at once at the top of the comment section. Pretty neat, yeah?)

Thanks, everyone, and I hope this post was helpful! I'm going to go collapse for a while now 😅
nanila: me (Default)
Mad Scientess ([personal profile] nanila) wrote in [community profile] awesomeers2026-03-20 05:48 am
Entry tags:

Just One Thing (20 March 2026)

It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
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Cristi-Ann ([personal profile] thesleepingbeauty) wrote in [community profile] fandom10in302026-03-19 09:43 pm

Round 62: Hearts & Flowers by thesleepingbeauty



All icons are HERE at [community profile] little_mermaid. ♥️

reggiekray: (Default)
𝚁𝙴𝙶𝙶𝙸𝙴 ([personal profile] reggiekray) wrote in [community profile] addme_fandom2026-03-20 01:27 am
Entry tags:

hello~

Name: reggie.

Age group: late 30s.


Country: USA.


Subscription/Access Policy: 99% open! very rarely will anything be locked.



Main Fandoms: stranger things, joe keery, joseph quinn, dacre montgomery, fred hechinger.


Other Fandoms: old-school anime/manga/doujinshi, the kray twins. (real life and legend 2015 with tom hardy)


Fannish Interests: fanart, fanfic, graphics... pretty simple, lol.


OTPs and Ships: billy hargove/eddie munson, billy hargrove/steve harrington, steve harrington/eddie munson (stranger things), geta/caracalla (gladiator 2), johnny storm/ben grimm aka the thing (fantastic four: first steps), logan howlett/remy lebeau (x-men), eddie brock/venom (venom), haddock/tintin (tintin), vegeta/bulma (dragonball), gojyo/hakkai (saiyuki), yusuke/hiei (yyh), sam/dean (spn), reggie kray/ronnie kray (rpf).



Favourite Movies: aladdin, buckaroo banzai, rocketman (2019), hot fuzz, the nice guys, legend (2015), kingsman: the secret service, bronson.


TV Shows: twin peaks, generation kill, queer as folk UK, supernatural, the young ones, metalocalypse, king of the hill.


Books: profession of violence: the rise and fall of the kray twins.


Music: marianas trench, above & beyond, H.I.M, savage garden, djo, elton john, ghost, basshunter, BUCK-TICK, dir en grey, versailles.


Games: the legend of zelda: ocarina of time & majora's mask, pokémon gold, donkey kong country 2, detroit become human.


Comics/Anime/Misc: x-men, dragonball, yu yu hakusho, saiyuki, gundam wing, one piece, sailor moon, evangelion, fullmetal alchemist, cyborg 009, nightwalker, danny phantom.

Kevin & Kell ([syndicated profile] kevinandkell_feed) wrote2026-03-20 12:00 am

Feathered disguise

Comic for Friday March 20th, 2026 - "Feathered disguise" [ view ]

On this day in 1998, we see Rudy and Fiona speeding by on their bikes all over the place. Just why are they in such a hurry?... [ view ]

Today's Daily Sponsor - Today's comic strip is sponsored by: David Waroff. [ support ]