His(?) skin may be soft, but he still has a bad case of the jaggies.
EricL
7 years ago
Nice purple skirt ya got there, Sparky. Why are you trying to shave that tat off your back with the edge of your shiny sword? Kind of an extreme approach for getting at an itch.
Naaman Brown
7 years ago
“Smoke”, part of the author’s Clan of Dragons series, has a book cover with a similar pose looking across water at a mountain (except surf’s up) with a back with a dragon tat, shorter sword, more manly physique, but similarly lovely hair. The series has a signature.
Nit pick: a proper kilt is worn at the waist (below the last rib, above the hips) not as hip-huggers.
I’m also pretty sure they don’t have loops to slide belts through. But then again, I also believe Highland warriors don’t use back-glue as a method of storing their swords.
Checking “Authentic Scottish men’s kilts” I don’t find belt loops either. I don’t recall any belted kilts worn by Celtic reenactors at the local Society for Creative Anachronism meetings, but that’s been years ago.
His(?) skin may be soft, but he still has a bad case of the jaggies.
Nice purple skirt ya got there, Sparky. Why are you trying to shave that tat off your back with the edge of your shiny sword? Kind of an extreme approach for getting at an itch.
“Smoke”, part of the author’s Clan of Dragons series, has a book cover with a similar pose looking across water at a mountain (except surf’s up) with a back with a dragon tat, shorter sword, more manly physique, but similarly lovely hair. The series has a signature.
Nit pick: a proper kilt is worn at the waist (below the last rib, above the hips) not as hip-huggers.
“Smoke” https://lousybookcovers.com/?p=888142
I’m also pretty sure they don’t have loops to slide belts through. But then again, I also believe Highland warriors don’t use back-glue as a method of storing their swords.
Where do you think Elmer’s Mucilage comes from?
Checking “Authentic Scottish men’s kilts” I don’t find belt loops either. I don’t recall any belted kilts worn by Celtic reenactors at the local Society for Creative Anachronism meetings, but that’s been years ago.