Tags descriptions
touhou:
The Touhou Project (東方Project Tōhō Purojekuto), also known as Toho Project or Project Shrine Maiden, is a series focused on bullet hell shooters made by the one-man developer Team Shanghai Alice, whose sole member, known as ZUN, is responsible for all the graphics, music, and programming for the most part. The Touhou Project began in 1996 with the release of the first game, Highly Responsive to Prayers, developed by the group Amusement Makers for the Japanese NEC PC-9801 series of computers. The next four Touhou games released between August 1997 and December 1998 also were released on the NEC PC-9801. The Touhou Project was inactive for the next three and half years until the first Microsoft Windows Touhou game, The Embodiment of Scarlet Devil, was released in August 2002 solely by ZUN after he split from Amusement Makers and started Team Shanghai Alice. Touhou Project became a media franchise spanning a steadily increasing number of official games, in addition to commercial fan books, light novels, and manga.
short hair:
Hair no longer than shoulder length.
highres:
High resolution images.
An image with this tag should be more than 1700 pixels wide and 700 pixels tall.
This tag is automatically added to images.
wide image:
An image that has aspect ratio of more than 8:5 (width bigger than height in1.6+ times).
This tag is automatically added to images.
fringe:
Hair that drapes forward to hang in front of the forehead. Known in British English as a fringe.
shirt:
This term has two meaning. In American English, a catch-all term for a broad variety of upper-body garments and undergarments. In British English, a shirt is more specifically a garment with a collar, sleeves with cuffs, and a full vertical opening with buttons or snaps (North Americans would call that a "dress shirt", a specific type of "collared shirt").
Here shirt is used in british meaning!
triangular headpiece:
三角頭巾(sankaku zukin, lit. triangular headpiece) is a type of headband sometimes worn by ghosts in Japanese folklore.
Derived from Edo period burial rituals, it was originally intended to protect the newly deceased from evil spirits. It has various regional names, Hitai-eboshi, Tenkan, Houkan, Kami-kaburi, and so on.