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#Chris Askham
downthetubes · 1 year
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British Comics Crowdfunding Spotlight: Soviet super agents, Death defying Vikings, and more!
Spotlighting several comic-related crowdfunding campaigns from British creators on the go right now
There are several comic-related crowdfunding campaigns from British creators on the go right now, in addition to projects we’ve recently highlighted in more detail on downthetubes… Can the VYPER team stop a Soviet terrorist attack launched at the heart of LA? Find out in this 64-page comic – Vyper: Crimson Dawn from ace creator, Dan Butcher. Sloane and the Vyper team face an apocalyptic terror…
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caosenelviento · 3 months
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Gambit
By Chris Askham
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illyanarasputinfan · 1 year
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Chris Askham
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fuckyeahmeikokaji · 3 years
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Badass Meiko Kaji (梶芽衣子) as Lady Snowblood (修羅雪姫) commission by Chris Askham (@chris_askham) for his Kickstarter!
http://fuckyeahmeikokaji.tumblr.com/
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ugrot · 7 years
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aagciii · 7 years
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By Chris Askham
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texasthrillbilly · 2 years
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Moonbeam McSwine by Chris Askham
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leerobson · 5 years
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ANDERSON, PSI DIVISION: BRING ME A DREAM Episodes 8-15
Script: Lee Robson
Art: Chris Askham
Letters: Bolt-01
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2000adonline · 6 years
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Chris Askham -- Dredd
for the Art Stars competition!
More details here:
https://2000ad.com/post/3425
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simonbreeze · 2 years
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SAVAGE! JUNGLE PRINCESS: THE HATE MACHINES Now available on Kickstarer (link in the bio) from Kult Creations. Please take a look and support the team behind this fun comic. It may also feature some artwork by me as well. Savage! Is an 44 page, full-colour, square-bound, self-contained, tongue-in-cheek, jungle, dinosaur, cheesecake, action/adventure comic! The story is set in the summer 1940, on Death Island (where dinosaurs never died out) the Third Reich are at it again! This time they've invaded with Nazi Robots! It's all up to castaway New Yorker, Arabella Adelaide Savage, and shipwrecked cockney secretary, Friday Robinson to save the day! It's a tongue-in-cheek electro-punk adventure in the style of 1940s American jungle comics with a cheeky slice of 'Carry On Up The Jungle' for good measure! The most fun you can have with your loin cloth on! Full colour art by Gabrielle Noble. Full blooded script by John A. Short. Exclusive Kickstarter cover by Chris (Switchblade Stories) Askham!  #comic #comics #comicbook #comicbooks #comicart #graphicnovel #scifi #sciencefiction #fantasy #reading #read #comicfan #book #read #superhero #scifi #sciencefiction #scifiart #fantasy #robot #retro #classic #dinosaur #jungle #junglegirl #savage #savagejungleprincess #kultcreations #Kickstarer https://www.instagram.com/p/CZyx2wmMoSw/?utm_medium=tumblr
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downthetubes · 2 months
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Crowdfunding Spotlight: Shokwave 4 continues "Nosferatu" sequel horror tale!
The Kickstarter campaign for the latest issue of Shokwave, an anthology title from John A. Short, ends this Sunday, 3rd March 2024 - and you don't want to miss out if you previously grabbed Diabolica by John and David Hitchcock
The Kickstarter campaign for the latest issue of Shokwave, an anthology title from John A. Short, ends this Sunday, 3rd March 2024 – and you don’t want to miss out if you previously grabbed Diabolica by John and David Hitchcock. Shokwave Volume Four features Nosferatu II from the same creators, and it looks pretty incredible from the teaser images we’ve been sent. Each issue features ten new…
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instantdeerlover · 4 years
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Lesbian Weddings – Here Come The Girls added to Google Docs
Lesbian Weddings – Here Come The Girls
We thought it was high time RMW joined in Pride Month and reminded you of some of the incredible Lesbian weddings we’ve featured. (Don’t worry we’ll be sharing our Gay couples tomorrow.) Because, weddings are all about people coming together in love and friendship, and being proud of who you are and who you love. Plus, just like the saying #loveislove, #inspirationisinspiration, and well, there is certainly an abundance of it here. Hello, double helping of wedding dresses and brides in killer suits!
If you fancy taking a look more closely at any of the real weddings featured below, just click on the couples name and it’ll take you to the article.
Outdoor Spanish Wedding with Pink Peony Flower Crowns
Pau & Alex said I do in breathtaking Marta Planella wedding dresses and matching blush pink peony flower crowns. Their ceremony was emotional, and their al fresco reception full of style including white paper lanterns and a love seat for the stunning couple.
    Rustic Wedding at Askham Hall with Fairy Lights
Katy & Myrthe show us how to have a rustic celebration in style. They drape fairy lights from Askham Hall’s ceiling, tape fern leaves to the walls and include an abundance of pastel flowers, potted plants and on the day wedding stationery and signs. Plus, they include many traditional and non-traditional wedding day moments like a first look, and brides speeches, all of which was captured beautifully by Erin Browne Photography.
    A Festival Inspired Tipi Wedding with Pies and Gin
Lucy & Vicki loved festivals so just had to have a festival themed tipi wedding. They filled it with 100m of homemade bunting, tote bags, seating plans and placenames, and did things their way, by walking down the aisle together and enjoying pies as part of their wedding breakfast.
    Homemade Macrame Backdrop and Favours and Bright Flowers for Rustic Wedding
We were in absolute awe of Georgie & Gemma‘s barn wedding. Filling the reception with a huge macrame backdrop and favours. Plus, wishbones for every guest that the bride’s grandmother had been collecting for over 40 years. Also, how about those flowers?! A gorgeous array of colourful blooms.
   Micro Wedding in Ireland with Stunning Watters Wedding Dresses
Victoria & Eva instantly wowed us with their incredible Watters wedding dresses. Each one individually perfect for their personalities, and together beautifully complementing one another. Their wedding was the first time their families had met, but there were no inhabitions as they partied into the night.
   Contemporary Shoreditch Wedding with Fabulous Fashion & Colour Popping Flowers
Lisa & Sacha wore the chicest of high street fashion for their city wedding with rainbow shoes, blazers and a tea length wedding dress. They celebrated with close family and friends in their favourite restaurant and had the best time ‘not’ posing for pictures with Chris Barber Photography.
    Micklefield Hall Wedding With Outdoor Ceremony
Natalie & Melissa said I do by the pond at Micklefield Hall and it was every bit as picturesque as you can imagine. They also bought along with them their pet dachshunds and had singing waiters entertain guest during the wedding breakfast.
  A Relaxed Woodland Wedding with Bridal Jumpsuit
Ammie & Charlotte‘s wedding was extremely relaxed, exactly as they has hoped. Set amongst the trees with a rustic wedding cake, gypsophila and wooden wedding signs. Plus, sparkly Jimmy Choo’s and the most fabulous bridal jumpsuit complete with lace train.
    A Chic Celebration in Spain with Two Beautiful Brides in Fitted Wedding Dresses
Ana & Elena complemented one another in fitted wedding dresses and sleek hairstyles for a sunny Spanish celebration. The beautiful ceremony and reception was held in the grounds of Castell Paraledo in Girona and they decorated it with hanging glass bottles, candles and divine floral arrangements in pink hues. This wedding was an effortlessly chic celebration.
    Coed Hills Wales Wedding with White Flowers and Rustic Decor
Cath & Anna took full advantage of the grounds at Coed Hills in Wales and decorated the barn reception with an abundance of rustic details. Taking on many DIY projects themselves including making a doughnut wall.
    A City Celebration at The Asylum in London with Bridal Suit and Blush Blooms
Carla & Kadeine had a city wedding at The Asylum in London with hundreds of candles, fairy lights and ribbon decorating the iconic altar. Each bride was true to her own style opting for a Flora wedding dress and a navy bridal suit. They celebrated their union with German favours and Jamaican food to represent both of their cultures and everyone was full of smiles.
  Outdoor Ceremony and Tipi Reception with Grazing Boards & Cocktails
Gemma & Kara‘s wedding is brimming with inspiration and advice including a monumental naked tipi altar, plus lots of tips for hosting your own outdoor wedding.
  Stylish City Vibes and a Cobalt Blue Bridal Jumpsuit
Alice & Sinead said their I Do at Islington’s Town Hall then celebrated in the local pub with paper lanterns and fairy lights strung from the ceiling. Plus, a cheese tower wedding cake and lots of polaroid pictures displaying their life and memories together.
  Greenwich Yact Club Wedding with Paper Boat Oragami Decor
When Emillie & Ruth first started dating they spent a lot of time on the Southbank overlooking the Thames, so when they found the Greenwich Yacht Club it was the perfect venue for them. They really wanted to make the day about the things they love so began crafting a lot of DIY. They did everything from the woodwork, graphic design, baking, sewing and folding 3000 origami boats!
    Tropical Destination Wedding with Beach Wedding Ceremony
Sarah & Kate are from England and Australia so always knew they wanted a destination wedding somewhere in between. They found the gorgeous Villa Mia in Koh Samui, Thailand and had the intimate ceremony they always dreamed of right there by the beach!
  Engagement Shoot in Brighton with Vintage Fashion
Jessica & Claudia‘s engagement shoot in Brighton was fun, natural and full of fierce fashion. The images perfectly reflect their personalities and are a lovely reminder of this special time.
   Vintage Wedding Decor for Romantic Wedding in Ireland
Ailbhe & Rachel filled their Ireland wedding with Hollywood glamour and vintage wedding decor including typewriters, birdcages and suitcases. They look incredible in lace wedding dresses, and thanks to the referendum in 2015 were able to to get married in front of all their family and friends.
 Each year in June the LGBTQ+ communities all over the world come together to commemorate the Stonewall riots, which were protests that changed gay rights for a lot of people in America and beyond. Although there is still work to be done in some countries, Pride month is about teaching tolerance, education in pride history and continuing to move forward in equality. Rock My Wedding have recently pledged to our community to do better, be more diverse and represent all love stories. We want to ensure that everybody feels represented and wholeheartedly welcome all your submissions. If you’d like to be featured, then please ask your photographer to submit your wedding using our online submissions platform!
The post Lesbian Weddings – Here Come The Girls appeared first on ROCK MY WEDDING | UK WEDDING PLANNING & DIRECTORY.
via ROCK MY WEDDING | UK WEDDING PLANNING & DIRECTORY https://www.rockmywedding.co.uk/lesbian-weddings/Nhà hàng Hương Sen chuyên buffet hải sản cao cấp✅ Tổ chức tiệc cưới✅ Hội nghị, hội thảo✅ Tiệc lưu động✅ Sự kiện mang tầm cỡ quốc gia 52 Phố Miếu Đầm, Mễ Trì, Nam Từ Liêm, Hà Nội http://huongsen.vn/ 0904988999 http://huongsen.vn/to-chuc-tiec-hoi-nghi/ https://trello.com/userhuongsen
Created June 20, 2020 at 12:50PM /huong sen View Google Doc Nhà hàng Hương Sen chuyên buffet hải sản cao cấp✅ Tổ chức tiệc cưới✅ Hội nghị, hội thảo✅ Tiệc lưu động✅ Sự kiện mang tầm cỡ quốc gia 52 Phố Miếu Đầm, Mễ Trì, Nam Từ Liêm, Hà Nội http://huongsen.vn/ 0904988999 http://huongsen.vn/to-chuc-tiec-hoi-nghi/ https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1xa6sRugRZk4MDSyctcqusGYBv1lXYkrF
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tipsoctopus · 5 years
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'Limbs everywhere', 'Just magic' - Loads of Sheffield Wednesday fans revel in nostalgia
Sheffield Wednesday fans on Twitter have been reminiscing after the club posted footage of a classic match at Hillsborough.
A little bit of late drama on #WorldTheatreDay for you all!
😪 We're 0-2 down ⚽️ Fletcher pulls one back to make it 1-2 ⚠️ We concede a penalty 🔴 We're reduced to ten men 😅 The penalty hits the post! ⚽️ @bazzabannan25 equalises! 🙌 95th minute @kieranlee1988 makes it 3-2! pic.twitter.com/RXMKV3Hubk
— Sheffield Wednesday (@swfc) March 27, 2019
The video was shared on Twitter for World Theatre Day and featured a dramatic last-gasp winner from midfielder Kieran Lee, which was celebrated with a mini pitch invasion in the late-night Yorkshire rain.
The strike was the decider in a 3-2 Sky Bet Championship victory over Bristol City for the Owls in September 2016 and was scored after the visitors had led 2-0 at the break and the hosts had mounted a remarkable second-half comeback.
And Wednesday supporters were absolutely loving the clip, sharing memories from that evening on the social media platform in their droves.
Some simply posted comments such as “loved this game,” whilst others were just proud to say that they were there.
One fan even went as far as saying it was his “favourite home game in these last few years.”
Check out a selection of the best reactive Tweets from fans of the Sheffield club below…
The indoor football skills in the video below have to be seen to be believed…
Loved this game ?
— Greg Kuczmaida (@kuczmaida) March 27, 2019
I was on the kop for that one! Limbs everywhere
— [SAP] Jimi * ???* Steel™ (@jimimanovsteel) March 27, 2019
I was there that night ?
— Spike (@ikeiscool1986) March 27, 2019
My favourite home game is these last few years. Just great They missed a pen at 2-1 aswell then had a man sent off straight after haha. Also game nearly didn’t go ahead because of rain. Delayed by 15 mins I think it was. Maddness.
— Tom Evans (@TomEvanswawaw) March 27, 2019
I remember this very well. Mate of mine who’s a City fan sending me messages and having a laugh at my dismay until it all came undone for them ??.
— Col Ellis ?? (@Col_SWFC) March 28, 2019
Amazing night. ?⚪?⚪
— Jake Kelley (@JKelley85) March 28, 2019
Got to love it when the commentators lose it just like the fans. It was a special night that’s for sure
— Peter Dadswell (@Dadders) March 28, 2019
One of the best games I’ve seen for a long long time. Dead an buried at half time, that equaliser from bazza! And then kieran popping in with the last touch. All after that biblical downpour!!!!
— Chris Ash (@ChrisAsh1975) March 27, 2019
Brilliant just magic
— John Askham (@AskhamJohn) March 27, 2019
Remember it well. What an ending! Jumping on some random chap next to me ? And that rain…. ?⚪?⚪ pic.twitter.com/k7SxSRWN9F
— Rob McKinney (@RealBobbieM) March 27, 2019
from FootballFanCast.com https://ift.tt/2Yxv2CY via IFTTT from Blogger https://ift.tt/2Fz1qw7 via IFTTT
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ugrot · 7 years
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reneenort-blog · 6 years
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Brad Scott-Krzysztof Jotko, Scott Askham-Chris Dempsey set for UFC Fight Night 83 #UFCFightNight http://dlvr.it/Q0f8fX
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wherespaulo · 7 years
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Hiking Around Edale
Aug 7-10, 2017
Edale would be a perfect spot to spend the first three nights of my UK/Iceland trip. A tiny, remote village tucked into a nook of the Pennine hills in the southern Peak District, it is the starting point of the famous Pennine Way hike to Scotland, yet easily accessible from Sheffield or Manchester by local train. And, most importantly, serviced by two character drinking and accommodation establishments – the Rambler Inn and the Old Nags Head.
Growing up in Sheffield I have so much history with this place. And as I alighted onto the tiny platform, pausing briefly to take a deep, long breath of the intoxicating air, the recognizable sights, sounds and smells slowly began to course through my veins and percolate into my soul. I'm immediately taken back to my teenage years, when we were living for the day. When getting lost within the warren of rivulet-ted peat bogs on Kinder Scout, or down the maze of limestone pot holes of Winatts Pass, was followed by some underage drinking of the infamous Theakestones Old Peculiar ale in the Old Nags Head, and rowdy banter in a patched up, smoke filled tent pitched on Coopers Farm. Farmer Cooper, who'd had a god-like status amongst the teenage campers at the time. A man of few words and facial expressions yet with what seemed like some kind of mysterious power. Like the time we'd arrived just as dark was setting in only to find the crucial apex piece of our tent frame was missing, and two minutes later he'd conjured up one out of nowhere.
Then there was the time in my twenties when myself and two fellow PhD chemistry students/come drinking companions had decided to prize ourselves away from our university laboratory experiments to hike the first fifty miles of the Pennine Way from Edale. We were an unlikely bunch then, with Topul an out-of-place native of Papua New Guinea, and Ray, a hard drinking squash player from Wolverhampton.
Well, here I was again, more than thirty years on, checking into the Rambler Inn, perfectly located next to the train station. And I now delighted to find that the irascible and shrewd old farmer Cooper was still in residence after all these years! I set off late afternoon for Rushup Edge to hike through the jet lag from my New York flight. As I strode west along the crown of the blustery high ridge, cool air in my lungs and sun on my face, with vistas of wide green valleys on either side, north to Edale and south towards Castleton, the wide open spaces were like fuel poured onto the glowing embers in my heart, causing a wild conflagration and making me feel alive. It was a flame lit many years ago as a 10 year old while regularly exploring the desolate Haworth moorlands of Bronte’s Wuthering Heights country with my school class and progressive teacher, Mr Smith, where Catherine’s final words were “I wish I were out of doors – half savage and hardy - I’m sure I should be myself were I once among the heather on those hills’. I carried the widest incessant smile, both externally and internally. This is where I belonged. Where I really belonged! Not in this specific place, but in those wild, desolate places. Where the enormity of beauty will strike at your very soul, and, just for a moment, you will be part of it all, and time will seem to stand still.
After a few miles along Rushup Edge I took the right turning at the signpost marked 'Barber Booth and Edale' onto a long, winding path of enormous limestone slabs which disappeared into the distance over purple heather carpeted peat bogs. The expected signpost for Barber Booth and Edale via Chapel Gate never materialized, so I merrily carried on for a further few miles along this amazing feat of engineering that had been built by helicoptering in the slabs. My iPhone's electronic compass and OS map photo kept me from being hopelessly lost, although that scenario does have a certain attraction for me, as I'm always veering towards the edge of my understood geography, both within the maze of the landscape and the labyrinth of my mind.
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I eventually hit the Pennine Way signpost and took a right down the steep Jacobs Ladder back towards Barber Booth, Edale and some well earned refreshments at the fine establishment known as Old Nags Head – Stilton, pork and leek sausages on a bed of cheddar mash, served inside a giant Yorkshire pudding, covered in a tasty layer of onion gravy, and with an ample side of the mushyist peas. And of course washed down with a couple of fine pints of Celtic Gold cask ale. I was in my element. A brisk ten mile hike, where I came close to heaven (whatever that is), followed by my feet up in a fine tavern with the very best comfort food and ale. Faces came and went as I gazed around those medieval walls. Ghosts of the past, living for the day before we knew where our respective lives might lead – Dave Tanner, Russ Lockwood...and of course Chris Anderson, who's life was taken away recently, way too soon.
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The next day of rain meant a stroll around the quaint villages of Hope and Castleton. I was drawn towards Peak Cavern, otherwise known as the Devil's Arse because of the flatulent-sounding noises from inside the cave when flood water is draining away, and which until the early 1900's was the home of rope making troglodytes. This cave has always held a mysterious power over me, ever since that time I entered it's cavernous interior as a relatively sane twelve year old on a school trip, yet emerged into the blinding light with a hopeless crush on Sharon Askham.  
The Kinder Circuit was my next planned route, a sixteen mile hike around the the complete escarpment of the Kinder plateau. I took the Pennine Way route out of Edale, through Barber Booth, and up the steep Jacob's Ladder onto the plateau. I moved north past Kinder Low and Kinder Downfall, keeping to the western edge of the escarpment, before turning right off the Pennine Way, and along the northern edge of the escarpment to the prow of Fairbrook Naze. I then turned south, continuing to the follow the escarpment edge, crossed a brook, and followed the escarpment east towards Blackden Edge. At some point however, I became confused by my iPhone gps reading. It was informing me that the place I was headed, Crookstone Knoll, was in a slightly different direction than it should have been. And I know from past experience that you really don't want to take a wrong turn on Kinder Scout! So ten miles in I decided the safest course of action was to return to Edale the way I'd came. Of course about one mile into my return journey I realized what had happened – the Google map on my iPhone had simply rotated slightly from true north. Feck! Feckin doh! Doh! But I had already retraced one mile of my steps before my brain had got in gear, so I just carried on back to Edale the way I'd come. As I strode downhill off the plateau with a light feeling in my heart and twenty miles under my belt, the verdant green Vale of Edale stretched out below me, I looked forward to home made pie and cask ale in the Old Nags Head, and vowed to complete the eastern edge of the circuit another day soon.
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For my final hike of around ten miles in glorious sunshine, I decided to head onto the Kinder plateau via Grindslow Knoll, then head east on the southern edge of the escarpment, past Nether Tor and Ringing Roger, before heading back down to Edale over The Nab. This last section actually took in part of the route I should have taken the previous day.  
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As I sat on the train heading towards Sheffield to see my family, I contemplated the growing mysterious pull that Edale seems to have on me these days. Is it the ghosts of my past or the sheer beauty of this place that makes me feel so at home here?  Or is it the permanent residents that settled in the old cemetery opposite the church, Rowbottom's dating back to the 1600's? All I do know is that I'll be back again very soon!
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