kaleb's avatar

@kaleb
Beta tester

sup
Wall

Got this crazy hairstyle today so I may make a new pfp 👀

real

i am waste of money

;-;

This is literally how every single collaboration with my bro Full Throttle goes

Anyways here’s a new collab with Full Throttle hope you enjoy: soundcloud.com/k10398-official/regrets

go follow Full Throttle right now or i will steal your knees

7 0 4

Hey y’all, hope your Thanksgiving day is going good so far

Just had the best stuffing I’ve had in a very long time, turkey was good too

Anyway, I started doing a sketch a day to build up my sketching skills (and to give myself something else off of the computer to do when I’m bored), here’s my first lil thing I did today

Tried to do a perspective type thing and it turned out fine- until I did the lid 💀

I hope tomorrow’s sketch is way better 🤞🏼

9 0 3

merry 4th of thanksgiving 🗿

(all jokes aside, i hope y’all have a great day with your families and friends, i know i will 🙂)

you know a song is good when you can listen to it on repeat for hours without it losing its flavor

i guess i probably shouldn’t diss on pop music anymore around other artists

how tf do i already have negative karma on reddit

i can’t share any of my music on the r/trance subreddit now

i don’t know about you guys, but i think hold music is fire

what’s up with the stupid reddit username that i can’t change?

hey the hubble one makes it actually look like a sombrero lol

The Sombrero Galaxy from Webb and Hubble

This floating ring is the size of a galaxy. In fact, it is a galaxy -- or at least part of one: the photogenic Sombrero Galaxy is one of the largest galaxies in the nearby Virgo Cluster of Galaxies. The dark band of dust that obscures the mid-section of the Sombrero Galaxy in visible light (bottom panel) actually glows brightly in infrared light (top panel). The featured image shows the infrared glow in false blue, recorded recently by the space-based James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and released yesterday, pictured above an archival image taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope in visible light. The Sombrero Galaxy, also known as M104, spans about 50,000 light years and lies 28 million light years away. M104 can be seen with a small telescope in the direction of the constellation Virgo.

5 0 0