GIGGLESS YESSS REALREALREALLL HED 100% REASSURE HER NO MATTER WHAT BC HE JUST LOVES SEEING HIZ GF HAPPY YIPPIEE
dropz you a ninatoby hc of mine x3
Nina would probably dye Toby’s hair if he ever let her. She’d 100% do his hair and makeup too!!
I don’t have anything else to say but I wanted to yap so have this
YEEESSSS YESYESYES YES YES
Shed practice doing hair dye on Toby totally and no matter how it looked he’d tell her she did well bc he just loves seeing how excited she gets aughdhshs
AND SHE WOULD DO HIS MAKEUP TOO maybe even teach him… at one point he’d do Nina’s makeup for her instead of the other way around and she’d be so giggly about it
photography by Johan Persson
So, going by the tags on my recent jump gifsets, the difference between jumps is apparently still a source of great bewilderment for some people. Now I could link you to some excellent posts on the topic, but since I am, as usual, an extra lil piece of dirt with too much work to do and a lifetime’s worth of procrastination, I’ve decided to put together my own layman’s guide to identifying figure skating jumps (stressed on the layman part).
First, here be a flowchart, since everybody loves flowcharts, right?
If the flowchart works as intended and you can now tell the jumps apart, great! If you need a bit more explanation and illustration, read on.
Keep reading