I need suitless vader offering a baffled padme the imperial throne.
“Ani-”
“I would serve only you, my love.”
Bonus sketch of Imperial Prince Luke bc im a sucker for the slicked back hair:
SITH! OBI-WAN & ANAKIN SKYWALKER | WHAT IF? STAR WARS BY ME. I always liked the idea of Obi-Wan corrupted by the dark side, so i made this. Star Wars really needs a what if show.
*happy beeps*
[got to thinking about artoo helping anakin record those videos for ahsoka 🥹]
Star Wars Locations — 1/2
↳ Star Wars: the Prequel Trilogy (I-III)
Alderaan, Coruscant, Mustafar, Naboo, Tatooine
↳ Star Wars (IV-VI)
Alderaan, Endor, Hoth, Tatooine
↳ Star Wars: The Force Awakens (VII)
Ahch-To, Jakku, Takodana
Okay but consider:
A Jedi Temple carved into a mountain, whose only entrance is at least 80 meters off the ground on the face of said mountain, and it's a type of training and challenge for young Padawans going to visit it with their Master to climb it until they arrive at the doors.
A visual guide to the clones of the Grand Army of the Republic, made by me. I used this gifset by skybson and this incredibly thorough and helpful list by propheticfire as references, please check them out!
This includes clones who made screen appearances in Canon, so it does not include clones from comics, novels, or Legends.
Tbh I was originally going to make this a gifset and then I thought why not visually categorize the entire GAR for fun so here we are!
SITH! AHSOKA & ANAKIN SKYWALKER | WHAT IF? STAR WARS BY ME. "YOU FAILED ME! DO YOU KNOW...WHAT I'VE BECOME?" "I GAVE YOU A CHOICE". This is not dark against light. This is more personal. It's not even master against apprentice. It's more than that. It's brother against sister. It's Anakin against Ahsoka. Face to face.
Noticed the height problem in last post….
Robe a l’Anglaise
c.1770
British
This robe à l’anglaise is a superb expression of the English taste in dress—skillful cut and construction, and free from elaborate trimmings—a sensibility that increasingly influenced European modes of dress in the late eighteenth century. The refined simplicity and neat tailoring associated with English dress grew increasingly influential in France during the latter half of the eighteenth century. By the 1770s, French fashion magazines regularly featured the robe à l’anglaise, praising its elegance and modest charm. This example is impeccably made and discreetly adorned, its sole ornamentation being bands of pinked, self-fabric trim. The choice of textile, a delicately patterned silk damask dating to the 1730s, is evidence of the common eighteenth-century practice of repurposing finely woven fabrics.
The MET (Accession Number: 2018.111a, b)