Tag: art
here are 10 of the 13 frames for the .gif i did of that scene redraw
this is so beautiful i can’t
I fucking died. I’m dead.
Goodbye my friends I’m gone.GUYS. ALL OF THIS IS A DRAWING
IT’S ARTWORK ASLKDJASKLD NOT A REAL PERSON
SEND HELP
GOOD BYE
you’re kidding right.
maybe-she-has-a-thing-about-dirt:
maybe-she-has-a-thing-about-dirt:
hipster!Elsa hot damn
LOL I SWEAR I READ ELSA
Just recolor it it’ll be Elphie and no one will know
gimmie
Elphie as in the great Green one?
This is still nice …Glasses good on Elsa
Oops, I’m flailing and squeaking oh well
The funny thing is I read Elsa too
Wait could you imagine that though?
A gelphie fic
Featuring Elsa
Hispster Elsa
With hipster glasses
In a gelphie
Like
Whatwait … is Gelphie what I think it is …
Glinda + Elphaba ?
yeah, gelphie = glinda x elphaba
I just thought I read elsa in there, but i fixed it C:Cami, you’re making the fandoms collide
WATCHU DOIN
MILI STAHP *slap u and make out with u* JUST KEEP CALM AND GIVE ME MILANGAS
Tuesday Tips SUPER WEEK – Feet
I don’t often have to draw bare feet, unless I’m doing Life Drawing. When storyboarding, the focus is generally not on the feet. They also are usually covered (shoes, socks), or just not shown on screen that much. Nonetheless, it’s important to understand their functionality and general appeal. Keep details to a minimum, unless the character uses its bare feet to grasp things or do things with them most humans don’t. The best example of pushing feet to an extreme degree of functionality would be Disney’s Tarzan (one of my all time favorite). Other than that, don’t draw too much attention to them, but find appeal in its shapes.
Norm
“So I walked back to my room and collapsed on the bottom bunk, thinking that if people were rain, I was drizzle and she was a hurricane.”
– Looking for Alaska
Sometimes you just really need to appreciate some fantastic art.
Erin Kelso (bluefooted), Tarot: The Star on deviantART
I started Dresden Codak nine years ago. Here’s a comparison of the very first strip I uploaded with the last panel of the most recent page.
In 2005 I was a floundering 21-year-old college student with no direction and growing debt. I drew that snake comic in a statistics class I was failing, and on my way home I decided to scan it and maybe put together a website. I thought if I kept doing that, I could teach myself to draw, as a fun hobby.
Since then, this comic has become my full time job (since 2008), and last year I raised over half a million dollars in the second most successful comics Kickstarter ever. I draw what I like, I have fans all around the globe, and most fortunately, I know what I want to do with my life. In those nine years I’ve had countless people from all corners tell me I couldn’t do this or that, or that I was wasting my time trying something that had no future or point. At the end of the day, though, I can only say “I’ll show you,” and I try to do just that.
Never underestimate the power of time, hard work, and stubbornness.
“Badass Versions of Beloved Characters”
by Sylvain Sarrailh: http://tohad.deviantart.com/


