Meine gefesselten und geknebelten Lieblingswölfe 10: Nav...
Finally I could finish the urgent pencil picture with X-mas deadline today and as a reward for myself, I arrested another wolf.
This time we have Nava from Balto movie 2 © Universal as a guest in our dungeon. Unlike Don Lope some cells away, Nava befriended the little fellas that inhabit the dungeon, because he is a noble kind hearted wolf elder. But whom they are suspecting to come, we do not know. Maybe another prisoner... or someone else.
This time we have Nava from Balto movie 2 © Universal as a guest in our dungeon. Unlike Don Lope some cells away, Nava befriended the little fellas that inhabit the dungeon, because he is a noble kind hearted wolf elder. But whom they are suspecting to come, we do not know. Maybe another prisoner... or someone else.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Bondage
Species Wolf
Size 848 x 897px
File Size 291.7 kB
Listed in Folders
Gotta chain up more wolves - and werewolves...can never have too many chained up - though in the werewolves' case, you'll have to use reinforced chains and very durable mounting points (no one ever thinks to check those, with the result that the werewolf ends up breaking free with the chains still attached along with a section of stone or concrete on the other end).
Taken straight from the Wikipedia.
"Some authors asserted that the idea of the werewolf's supposed vulnerability to silver dates back to the Beast of Gévaudan, a man-eating animal killed by the hunter Jean Chastel in the year 1767.[1][2][3] However, the allegations of Chastel purportedly using a gun loaded with silver bullets are derived from a distorted detail[4] based primarily on Henri Pourrat's Histoire fidèle de la bête en Gévaudan (1946). In this novel, the French writer imagines that the beast was shot thanks to fictitious medals of the Virgin Mary, worn by Jean Chastel in his hat and then melted down to make bullets.[5] An account of a Jämte about were-bears in 1936 attributes bullets of silver as the method of killing.[6] Swedish folklore tends to ascribe silver bullets as a catch all weapon against creatures, as wizards or the skogsrå, that are "hard" against regular ammunition.[7][8]"
I doubt Silver Bullets were Hollywood-exclusive dude...the very sound of the two words together literally feels like it came during the Wild West era if not a little after.
There's a reason its been so widely used, and we all knows literature comes before film. Whether its our classic monsters or Harry Potter. If it was in books first, misconstrued or not, if its widely accepted in Europe and the US, that's the consensus, wrong or not. No if's, and's, or but's.
If you simply want to be immune to Silver as a metal then that's fine.
But you responding like this to Eternal kinda comes off as a bit irritable because of a potential, simple mistake of misinformation. But Eternal is at partial fault for saying its related to Hollywood, Hollywood merely spreads the already in-motion trope from long ago. But nevertheless, your choice of words or diction feels a smidge hostile man. He's being playful and coy, and I hope that "nigh-invulnerable" means in comparison to normal humans trying to fight back either one-on-one or 2-3 with only normal weapons. Our strongest martial artists reasonably couldn't fight a werewolf, whether they participate in televised events or they're Shaolin Monks from the mountains. So if that is what you mean by "nigh-invulnerable" using relative terms, I can agree.
Otherwise...I doubt our characters would have much of a fight, and none of my characters that are more mortal based can shatter the earth, and the permanent rule I instill for my own creation of characters is "No Space, Time, Dimensional, Space-Time manipulation on mortals; Only exception is Teleportation using Space-Time with the example being Minato Namikaze using Flying Thunder God Technique. Which I slapped onto only one character of mine to give him better utility that costs less energy.
I am not here to fight, I am here to give information and also point out that you sound a bit overly apprehensive with friendly conversation. Yes, even if its just a literal "smidge". That subtle amount can literally change your entire tone of voice in your words. Diction matters quite alot throughout every human language, and you sound a smidge aggressive, but the very choice of words hints at a larger amount whether its a larger amount by a small increase, or a substantial increase.
"Some authors asserted that the idea of the werewolf's supposed vulnerability to silver dates back to the Beast of Gévaudan, a man-eating animal killed by the hunter Jean Chastel in the year 1767.[1][2][3] However, the allegations of Chastel purportedly using a gun loaded with silver bullets are derived from a distorted detail[4] based primarily on Henri Pourrat's Histoire fidèle de la bête en Gévaudan (1946). In this novel, the French writer imagines that the beast was shot thanks to fictitious medals of the Virgin Mary, worn by Jean Chastel in his hat and then melted down to make bullets.[5] An account of a Jämte about were-bears in 1936 attributes bullets of silver as the method of killing.[6] Swedish folklore tends to ascribe silver bullets as a catch all weapon against creatures, as wizards or the skogsrå, that are "hard" against regular ammunition.[7][8]"
I doubt Silver Bullets were Hollywood-exclusive dude...the very sound of the two words together literally feels like it came during the Wild West era if not a little after.
There's a reason its been so widely used, and we all knows literature comes before film. Whether its our classic monsters or Harry Potter. If it was in books first, misconstrued or not, if its widely accepted in Europe and the US, that's the consensus, wrong or not. No if's, and's, or but's.
If you simply want to be immune to Silver as a metal then that's fine.
But you responding like this to Eternal kinda comes off as a bit irritable because of a potential, simple mistake of misinformation. But Eternal is at partial fault for saying its related to Hollywood, Hollywood merely spreads the already in-motion trope from long ago. But nevertheless, your choice of words or diction feels a smidge hostile man. He's being playful and coy, and I hope that "nigh-invulnerable" means in comparison to normal humans trying to fight back either one-on-one or 2-3 with only normal weapons. Our strongest martial artists reasonably couldn't fight a werewolf, whether they participate in televised events or they're Shaolin Monks from the mountains. So if that is what you mean by "nigh-invulnerable" using relative terms, I can agree.
Otherwise...I doubt our characters would have much of a fight, and none of my characters that are more mortal based can shatter the earth, and the permanent rule I instill for my own creation of characters is "No Space, Time, Dimensional, Space-Time manipulation on mortals; Only exception is Teleportation using Space-Time with the example being Minato Namikaze using Flying Thunder God Technique. Which I slapped onto only one character of mine to give him better utility that costs less energy.
I am not here to fight, I am here to give information and also point out that you sound a bit overly apprehensive with friendly conversation. Yes, even if its just a literal "smidge". That subtle amount can literally change your entire tone of voice in your words. Diction matters quite alot throughout every human language, and you sound a smidge aggressive, but the very choice of words hints at a larger amount whether its a larger amount by a small increase, or a substantial increase.
https://maverick-werewolf.tumblr.co.....-fact-2-silver
This gal knows what the fuck she is talking about - she has researched werewolf lore for literally DECADES - SILVER.IS.A.HOLLYWOOD.CREATION - end of.
This gal knows what the fuck she is talking about - she has researched werewolf lore for literally DECADES - SILVER.IS.A.HOLLYWOOD.CREATION - end of.
Are you...serious?
I could care less about who researched what for decades, and you posting about this still proves my point.
This is from your link.
"Because, at one point in the history of werewolf studies, a few people started circulating this idea that the Beast of Gevaudan (an unknown creature that killed many people in France from approximately 1764 to 1767) was killed by a silver bullet. This idea was contrived by a writer"
To contrive and to make a mistake are two very different things. The man literally made the same mistake as the person who said "Oh Wolves have alphas" meanwhile, there is no such thing. The man who said that literally made that mistake and that mistake couldn't have been more severe. Everyone now believes there's alphas - when in reality, the man was literally observing a small family of two wolves, and their pups.
Trying to say that someone has decades of experience over me, meanwhile, both her and I have the first piece of evidence in literature. Its a literal book you can buy. To be chronologically documented. And that evidence is the man made a mistake. Not Hollywood. A man.
The fact your comment is super short implies you really don't care who you're talking to and continue to be apprehensive and try to assert being right over the literal fact I tried to present. Something tells me you can't stand being wrong or at least someone coming to you with a core fact that Silver Bullets or Silver in general, was still a mistake, rather than someone saying it was 100% intentional. In fact, it sounds like you very severely TL;DR'd it rather than giving it a full read.
To copy you since you seem super okay doing it to me: End. Of.
I could care less about who researched what for decades, and you posting about this still proves my point.
This is from your link.
"Because, at one point in the history of werewolf studies, a few people started circulating this idea that the Beast of Gevaudan (an unknown creature that killed many people in France from approximately 1764 to 1767) was killed by a silver bullet. This idea was contrived by a writer"
To contrive and to make a mistake are two very different things. The man literally made the same mistake as the person who said "Oh Wolves have alphas" meanwhile, there is no such thing. The man who said that literally made that mistake and that mistake couldn't have been more severe. Everyone now believes there's alphas - when in reality, the man was literally observing a small family of two wolves, and their pups.
Trying to say that someone has decades of experience over me, meanwhile, both her and I have the first piece of evidence in literature. Its a literal book you can buy. To be chronologically documented. And that evidence is the man made a mistake. Not Hollywood. A man.
The fact your comment is super short implies you really don't care who you're talking to and continue to be apprehensive and try to assert being right over the literal fact I tried to present. Something tells me you can't stand being wrong or at least someone coming to you with a core fact that Silver Bullets or Silver in general, was still a mistake, rather than someone saying it was 100% intentional. In fact, it sounds like you very severely TL;DR'd it rather than giving it a full read.
To copy you since you seem super okay doing it to me: End. Of.
Thanky much for the nice compliment.
To be honest, I am mostly into the aesthetics of a tied up character, not so much for the erotic aspect.
David Carradine had a good voice. In the german version Nava was voice acted by Helmut Krauss, the basic voice actor for John Goodman^^
To be honest, I am mostly into the aesthetics of a tied up character, not so much for the erotic aspect.
David Carradine had a good voice. In the german version Nava was voice acted by Helmut Krauss, the basic voice actor for John Goodman^^
Given just how fluffy Nava's tail, beard, ruff and overall fur look I imagine he could have quite a few of his little friends comfortably nestling there. He does have quite a regal look to him and an imposing build, though also more of a grandfatherly air to him so I imagine he'd be quite a gentle giant and a wise leader.
With the rat whom visited Don Lope, I imagine that might have been one of Nava's friends and that perhaps they're also visiting the other wolves. Now though maybe Nava has just caught the scent of another rat, the one whom his little friends told him about and though a mysterious and enigmatic figure might be able to help them...or given he's always ending up in these types of situations it could be he's another prisoner after all.
With the rat whom visited Don Lope, I imagine that might have been one of Nava's friends and that perhaps they're also visiting the other wolves. Now though maybe Nava has just caught the scent of another rat, the one whom his little friends told him about and though a mysterious and enigmatic figure might be able to help them...or given he's always ending up in these types of situations it could be he's another prisoner after all.
When you've got a dungeon setting with a number of wolves held captive in a variety of bondage positions and rats around, I imagine Eternal might not be too far away or that perhaps Celengauroth or Fennrer Valkodlak could be somewhere amongst the dungeons. Whom knows whom we might see in the dungeon if there's more wolves still to come.
Nava I think would be the one whom has a plan or will best keep a calm head in this situation.
Nava I think would be the one whom has a plan or will best keep a calm head in this situation.
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