Crafty Cernunnos
@cernunnos.bsky.social
220 followers 710 following 1.7K posts
Artisanal Witchery/Fiber/Crafts/Tarot he/him AuDHD NO AI/NFT - Read Pinned! AKA @CraftyCooper.bsky.social Destiny 2 Shitposter and Exo Enjoyer CAUTION - 18+ - I re/post NSFW and kink! Please follow responsibly! Avatar by @brighan.com
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
cernunnos.bsky.social
If you follow me and have "AI Banner or Avatar" label, you will be immediately blocked.
If you follow me and I'm just one of 40k other people, you will be immediately blocked.

I'm not here for 'follow farming' or 'clout'. I'm here to interact with real people.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
edgecrusherntb.bsky.social
#DESTINYTOBER25: Nine

After Edge of Fate, I think Guardians might be a little wary about "gifts from the Nine"...
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
destinythememe.bsky.social
My mind was granted a vision and my hand merely an instrument of the Traveler's will
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
everdrift.bsky.social
Vex Borderlands 4
(Gotta work on some other projects then I'll circle back to Harlowe and Amon)
-
#borderlands4
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
scintillant-h.bsky.social
#Destinytober25 from @d2artevents.bsky.social Day 10! "Upgrade"! 🍄

No one needs to make him bigger-

#Destiny2Art #Crow #Cayde6 #Felwinter #sketch #chibi #ScintHArt
Alt4Me
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
haykebyr.bsky.social
✏️✨ OCtober day 6 - Scifi AU
Varah is a solo space traveler with her own little ship, Aedan a courier on the stations within a system. They meet one day while she's passing through ~
#OCtober2025
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
bookwyrmsbookshelf.bsky.social
Worked on this all day and got it finished! An adorable little Stitch for October ☺️
#embroidery #pumpkin #stitch
cernunnos.bsky.social
Want to get in on that Stephen West MKAL so bad but I never finished the one I started in 2019. It's on a project bag... somewhere.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
littleconkers.bsky.social
Printable #crochet #colouring pages. Designs inspired by crochet patterns and stitches. tinyurl.com/yc48n8hh
#CrochetIdeas #ColourfulCrochet
tinyurl.com
cernunnos.bsky.social
It's dangerous to go alone, take this
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
sacredsapling.bsky.social
Don’t miss the chance to potentially be in our very first queer zine! 🥰 Please share, too!
taplingzines.bsky.social
Only one week left! We've already received a lot of wonderful applications, but we're still eager to see what else you all have to show us!

We've Always Been Here is a queer historical zine, aiming to show that LGBTQ+ people have always existed, and always will.

Apply:
forms.gle/MssWPMukkE39...
A graphic with stripes in the background in a blue-green-yellow gradient, reading: "Queer zine! Paid opportunity! One week remaining for artist applications!" Below is a watercolor image of two masculine figures sitting overlooking a canyon, and one has their arm wrapped around the other.
cernunnos.bsky.social
You need cute little figures in your life!
verdantsculpts.bsky.social
🍁🎃🍂🍁🎃🍂🍁🎃🍂

Happy Autumn! I have opened preorders for a few autumn figures. These will be limited through October 15th. I also have glow in the dark Patch Cats that I will be adding in a few days.

🛒 VerdantSculpts.com
A montage of 4 autumn/halloween themed figures.  There is a skeletal dragon, a mimikyu with a pumpkin, an orange tabby cat with pumpkins, and a crow sitting atop a dragon skull.
cernunnos.bsky.social
Good luck with the CPAP! Mine made a huge difference for me
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
morteraphan.bsky.social
This is not what it looks like. 🩸 [oc]
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
chrisshehanart.bsky.social
When your custom character appears in a cutscene.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
amberbladejones.bsky.social
You can use a credit card to get the beveled edge look. Drawn with a Hi-tec C pen for this one. It's the 85C in Glendale.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
verdantsculpts.bsky.social
A few recently finished commissions. Since sales are pretty dead, I will stay open for these for the next week or so. These are available individually or at a small discount if you order as a set. Worldwide shipping available. Last chance for custom work b4 the holidays.

ko-fi.com/verdantsculp...
A flat sculpted gryphon portrait.  He is various shades of blue with an orange beak and eyes.  He has large fluffy ears. Sculpted charms of a canine tail in various shades of brown with a matching tan paw with blue toe pads.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
scintillant-h.bsky.social
#Destinytober25 from @d2artevents.bsky.social Day 9! "Nine"! 🔥

We all need snack time 💫

#Destiny2Art #Crow #Cayde6 #TheNine #sketch #ScintHArt
Alt4Me
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
scintillant-h.bsky.social
🌿
👊
🌿

#Destiny2Art #Felwinter #ScintHArt #sketch
Alt4Me
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
scintillant-h.bsky.social
#Destinytober25 from @d2artevents.bsky.social Day 8! "Fireteam"! 🔥

Fel decided to wear a trench coat. I decided not to ask why LOL

#Destiny2Art #Crow #Cayde6 #Felwinter #sketch #ScintHArt
Destiny 2 fanart sketch on lined notebook paper with the characters Crow, Cayde-6, and Iron Lord Felwinter. They stand as a back-to-back trio in an otherwise unseen fight, implied that they're surrounded. Crow stands in the center, facing the POV, his gun drawn and aimed skyward while he's checking Felwinter with a smile. Crow's right leg is propped up on an undefined pile of rubble. Felwinter stands to Crow's left in a trench coat, wielding a basic shotgun in firing position. His form is in full action with his robes and coat ends flailing up and forward. Cayde-6 stands to Crow's right, his stance braced in the rubble for firing his gun, which is pointed off-screen. His cape billows forward around him.
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
incupuff.bsky.social
please support ur friends making creative shit in this cruel world. u have no idea how much a kind comment can mean to an artist when every website just tries to make you focus on the numbers
Reposted by Crafty Cernunnos
mjsdc.bsky.social
Washington Supreme Court Justice Mungia has an extraordinary opinion condemning "the underlying racism and prejudices that are woven into the very fabric" of SCOTUS opinions about Native people.

"We must clearly, loudly, and unequivocally state that was wrong.”
www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf...
MUNGIA, J. (concurring)—I concur with the majority’s opinion.1
 And yet I
dissent. Not from the majority’s opinion, but I dissent from the racism embedded in the
federal case law that applies to this dispute.
FEDERAL INDIAN LAW IS A PRODUCT OF THE RACIST BELIEFS ENDEMIC IN OUR SOCIETY
AND OUR LEGAL SYSTEM
While it is certainly necessary to follow federal case law on issues involving
Native American tribes and their members, at the same time it is important to call out that
the very foundations of those opinions were based on racism and white supremacy. By
doing this, readers of our opinions will have no doubt that the current court disavows, and
condemns, those racist sentiments, beliefs, and statements. Since the founding of our country, the federal government has characterized
Native Americans as “savages”: They were “uncivilized.” They had little claim to the
land upon which they lived. At times, the federal government attempted to eradicate
Native Americans through genocidal policies. At other times, the federal government
employed ethnic cleansing by forcibly removing children from their parents’ homes to
strip them from their culture, their language, and their beings.2
Federal Indian case law arises from those racist underpinnings.
The majority correctly cites to Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1, 8
L. Ed. 25 (1831), which is one of the foundational cases involving tribal sovereignty.
That opinion is rife with racist attitudes toward Native Americans. Chief Justice John
Marshall, writing for the majority, describes a tribe’s relationship to the federal
government as one of “ward to his guardian.” Id. at 17. In effect, the opinion presents
tribal members as children, and the federal government as the adult. That theme would
follow in later opinions by the United States Supreme Court—as would the theme of
white supremacy.
Cherokee Nation began with the premise that Native American tribes, once strong
and powerful, were no match for the white race and so found themselves “gradually
sinking beneath our superior policy, our arts and our arms.” Id. at 15. The white man
was considered the teacher, the Native Americans the pupils: Meanwhile they are in a state of pupilage. Their relation to the United
States resembles that of a ward to his guardian.
Id. at 17.
This characterization of superior to inferior, teacher to student, guardian to ward,
was repeated in later United States Supreme Court opinions.
In Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U.S. 553, 23 S. Ct. 216, 47 L. Ed. 299 (1903),
often characterized as the “American Indian Dred Scott,”
3
the Court used that rationale to
justify ruling that the United States could break its treaties with Native American tribes.
These Indian tribes are the wards of the nation. They are communities
dependent on the United States. Dependent largely for their daily food.
Dependent for their political rights. . . . From their very weakness and
helplessness . . . there arises the duty of protection, and with it the power.
Id. at 567 (quoting United States v. Kagama, 118 U.S. 375, 383-84, 6 S. Ct. 1109, 30 L.
Ed. 228 (1886)).
Our court also carries the shame of denigrating Native Americans by using that
same characterization: “The Indian was a child, and a dangerous child, of nature, to be
both protected and restrained.” State v. Towessnute, 89 Wash. 478, 482, 154 P. 805
(1916), judgment vacated and opinion repudiated by 197 Wn.2d 574, 486 P.3d 111
(2020).
3 See A Returning to Cherokee Nation, Justice William Johnson’s separate opinion was
less tempered in how he considered the various Native American tribes:
I cannot but think that there are strong reasons for doubting the
applicability of the epithet state, to a people so low in the grade of
organized society as our Indian tribes most generally are.
Cherokee Nation, 30 U.S. at 21. Native Americans were not to be treated as “equals to
equals” but, instead, the United States was the conqueror and Native Americans the
conquered. Id. at 23.
In discussing Native Americans, Justice Johnson employed another racist trope
used by judges both before and after him: Native Americans were uncivilized savages.
[W]e have extended to them the means and inducement to become
agricultural and civilized. . . . Independently of the general influence of
humanity, these people were restless, warlike, and signally cruel.
. . . .
But I think it very clear that the constitution neither speaks of them as states
or foreign states, but as just what they were, Indian tribes . . . which the law
of nations would regard as nothing more than wandering hordes, held
together only by ties of blood and habit, and having neither laws or
government, beyond what is required in a savage state.
Id. at 23, 27-28.
This same characterization was used by Justice Stanley Matthews in Ex parte KanGi-Shun-Ca (otherwise known as Crow Dog), 109 U.S. 556, 3 S. Ct. 396, 27 L. Ed. 1030
(1883). Justice Matthews described Native Americans as leading a savage life.