silvanoir:

[MY ART]  More stevebuckynat.  My ot3.  So it’s going to be 2 years between cap 2 and cap 3, both in the real world and the movie timeline.  Where was Bucky hiding (or rather why…)

and because my handwriting is terrible, the bottom thought bubbles say: “I mean I did shoot both my exes…AWKWARD.  Even thought it was Hydra that made me do it.  I’d never choose to, didn’t know if you’d understand that… This is still too awkward.  I want to hide for 2 more years…”

soldiiers:

God topples from the sky, hell’s fires fade:
Exit seraphim and Satan’s men:
I shut my eyes and all the world drops dead.

I fancied you’d return the way you said,
But I grow old and I forget your name.
(I think I made you up inside my head.)

– Sylvia Plath: Mad Girl’s Love Song.

thecostumetrailer:

“The most difficult thing I had to achieve in this film was creating the fabric for the Captain America Stealth Suit.  The Russos were very specific that they wanted a suit that was made of textured, woven, hard fabric like a Kevlar and not a printed stretch suit like you see over and over again in these films. But in reality it needed to be made of a stretch fabric that would allow movement and comfort, as well as the ability to be constructed into a more realistic military type trouser and protective top. I went through many incarnations of printed textures on stretch which then posed a whole new set of challenges and problems.  The HD cameras made raised textures strobe or moiré.  So finding the right one became a trial.  Then the printing ink would shine like plastic, which I disliked.  It took four months of research and development to create a texture that seems so simple and was yet, so complicated.” – Judianna Makovsky

maxiekat:

“Originally the movie opened with a World War II sequence,” Feige says. “It was in the script early on and we boarded and did some concept art for it (ed. – top 2 pictures) to try and remind the audience that he is from the past, reestablish Bucky as a character, and use that to transition into the world. Before production, as we were going through it, we realize the Smithsonian served that purpose, and the best thing for the movie would be just to throw the audience into the modern world with Cap. Then everything we needed to know about his experiences in World War II we could get out of his discussions with Sam and Peggy and the Smithsonian trip., which is why the WWII sequence fell out of the film.” – The Art of Captain America: The Winter Soldier