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No Succy you are supposed to do that after you get the coin! 

One last piece for the month of August!

I wanna thank everyone that pledged and was able to support me for this month, I hope for your continued support. <3 Hopefully my little red-head did the trick ;)

Tomorrow (Sept 1) we will be having the next Request Poll!(All patrons) 

As for the YCH I might postpone it so I can get through more of my commission list! it's rather long and I eventually wanna get through it ^^; But the good news is that they are all mostly Honeypot commissions! 

I am also going to do my best to get a new update for a certain wasteland comic~ maybe by the end of September. 

hope you all have enjoyed the art! take care and stay safe.

Files

Comments

Ninja Tweak

I suspect you don't even realize how appropriate tiny coins are. If you do the math based on the 50 coins = 1 pound rule, they should be so tiny that you can fit several thousand into a single liter

Razlin 1981

I really like both Succy and the minion costume. It's great cosplay Dandelion but now all of them will know about the minions. He's not trying to hide.

Ben Rowe

"Regardless of the denomination or metal type, all coins in 5th Edition D&amp;D weigh a little under a third of an ounce (0.32 oz to be precise). To put it in other words, there are fifty coins to a pound, regardless of the type of coin. Given this basic fact, we can use some reasonable assumptions and some math to get a picture of what the coins actually look like. Assuming that each coin has a thickness of 1/16”, and is made purely of that type of metal (as opposed to simply containing a certain quantity of that metal, since trade bars have the same value-to-weight ratio as coin and therefore the coin must be pure), we arrive at the following diameters for the different coins: Copper: 1.12” Silver: 1.04” Electrum: 0.87” Gold: 0.76” Platinum: 0.73” By comparison, a U.S. dollar coin has a thickness of about 1/13” and a diameter of 1.043”, roughly equivalent to a silver coin. In a way, this is fitting as the silver coin is the standard unit of currency for almost everyone in the D&amp;D world, in spite of what the Player’s Handbook will tell you. Only merchants and skilled tradesfolk will generally be handling coins of higher denomination, such as the gold coin (which is approximately three quarters of an inch in diameter, or slightly bigger than a U.S. dime). Everyone else gets paid in silver, buys things with silver, and keeps silver in their coinpurse. They would use silver as the measure of wealth, not gold." from http://dmsworkshop.com/2017/08/11/a-guide-to-dnd-coins/