#shamrock
I finished this comic from Sleepy Life of Servamp which I actually started on a while back, but I had to leave it aside for some time because the monthly chapters were the ones that took the most time to work on.
And from that day on, Shamrock has been very loyal to him.
TL note: when Tsubaki says “that name” the kanji reading for ‘name’ is ‘memory’. In the previous sentence, he said “memories of your previous life”. but I had to use the singular form ‘memory’ so that it would go with what he said after. Though, I guess maybe ‘memory’ of previous life might work too, but it sounded way better to use the plural word.
Credit for the scans @ iscanthings
☘️Shamrock Gloms ☘️
For each petal on the shamrock,
This brings a wish your way.
Good health. Good luck. Happiness.
For today and every day.
Happy St. Patrick’s Day!
Three renal corpuscles (glomerulus + their surrounding Bowman’s capsules) floating in a sea of distal and proximal convoluted tubules within the cortex of the kidney.
These three small structures are knotted balls of capillaries (glomeruli) surrounded by a specialized epithelium (Bowman’s capsule) that is composed of cells called podocytes. These cells have tiny interlocking legs that form a small slit between them.
This structural organization is responsible for filtering your blood to produce a fluid that then travels within tubes continuous with the Bowman’s capsule called nephrons. In these nephrons the tubular fluid is modified by reabsorbing and secreting ions and conserving water to produce urine for excretion.
a simple meal
Summer vibes.
So much luck for such a little piggy
Platinum Jubilee Silk Scarf, Westminster Abbey Shop, 2022
Designed with artist Rory Hutton, to celebrate Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee.
The coronation chair forms the centre of the scarf’s design, as the starting point of Queen Elizabeth’s reign. The martlets and oak leaves which originally decorated the coronation chair represent strength and nobility.
Surrounding the central motif are traditional symbols which are repeated throughout the architecture of Westminster Abbey - including the heraldic lion, the crown, the fleur-de-lis, the Tudor rose, the English rose, the Irish shamrock and the Scottish thistle. (No Welsh leek that I can see though!)