do you ever think about how if you dive into the ocean and go deeper and deeper you will pass through layers of darker and darker blue until everything is black and cold and the pressure will be so intense that it will kill you without protection but if you keep going you will find little glowing specks of light, and if you go up into the sky and go higher and higher you will pass through layers of darker and darker blue until everything is black and cold and the pressure will be so intense that it will kill you without protection but if you keep going you will find little glowing specks of light
"Bliss by Palette Knife" by River Berumen
hey these are some tips for some of the little details in drawing fat folks that some people might not know!
everyone has fat on their bodies so its a worthwhile skill to have, but most art tutorials leave it out. heres some other good tips from artists!!
Magical Moment at Fallen Leaf Lake, 2015.
Phyllis Shafer, (Buffalo, N.Y, b. 1958)
Overview of some topics when it comes to drawing characters who are burn survivors.
DISCLAIMER. Please keep in mind that this is an introductory overview for drawing some burn scars and has a lot of generalizations in it, so not every âX is Zâ statement will be true for Actual People. I'm calling this introductory because I hope to get people to actually do their own research before drawing disabled & visibly different characters rather than just making stuff up. Think of it as a starting point and take it with a grain of salt (especially if you have a very different art style from mine).
Talking about research and learning... don't make your burn survivor characters evil. Burn survivors are normal people and don't deserve to be constantly portrayed in such a way.
edit: apparently tum "queerest place on the internet" blr hates disabled people so much that this post got automatically filtered. cool!
I havenât shared these yet! These are 6 illustrations from my university project that was based on warriors! I chose to draw 6 scenes from Into the Wild from the 1st arc!
I made these as a way to compile all the geographical vocabulary that I thought was useful and interesting for writers. Some descriptors share categories, and some are simplified, but for the most part everything is in its proper place. Not all the words are as useable as others, and some might take tricky wording to pull off, but I hope these prove useful to all you writers out there!
(save the images to zoom in on the pics)
Me and a friend have been developing this conlang thing for use in co-op play, both for immersion and so we donât need to constantly pause to type things. I call it slugsign :-)
I should note that neither of us know ANYTHING about language structure or conlanging, we just developed it naturally lol.
some grammar notes:
-âpunctuationâ style signs (such as âquestionâ, âattentionâ, ârelaxâ) come before the rest of the sentence. this is for clarity of intent
-ârelaxâ can be used to initiate longer, more complex conversations
-signs are VERY position specific. the limitations of the medium make a lot of signs look similar, so using the right starting and ending positions are important.
-âregionâ specifies which region youâre referring to by the direction of your arm waggling, and the regions adjecent to the one youâre currently in. For example if you were in industrial complex and wanted to refer to chimney canopy, youâd waggle upwards.
aw hell naw the inner demons got hands
or: i doodled randomly and ended up really liking this one for the energy so i finished it up
High above Amphibia.
welcome to the reblog zone. i'm the anner. anne/roxy, it, this is where i put significant reblogs. simple.
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