LEGIT WHEN THE SCENE STARTED I SAID
"Oooh her dad's gonna be PISSED."
the part of ponyo where she accidentally floods all her dad’s shit and messes with the balance of the entire oceanic ecosystem will never not be funny to me
like she looks EXACTLY like kermit. and she’s being smacked the fuck around by so many different things. and then becomes 5 year old jesus?????
i love it i LOVE this movie it’s so whimsically wonderful
“Something isn’t right, nothing seems to make much sense to me.”
Jack Stauber’s Opal lives in my head rent free.
Know what I’m salty about?
In all my art classes, I was never taught HOW to use the various tools of art.
Like yes, form, and shape and space and color theory and figure drawing is important, but so is KNOWING what different tools do.
I’m 29 and I JUST learned this past month that India Ink is fucking waterproof when it dries. Why is this important? Because I can line something in India Ink and then go over it with watercolors. And that has CHANGED the ENTIRE way I art and the ease I can create with.
tldr: Art Teachers: teach your students what different tools do. PLEASE.
I wanna begin one of these Picrew chains, so I found this super cute Picrew!
@shawncoper1 @gessshoku @jooples-farded @maudiemoods
i had a dream about this scenario last night.
I am slowly getting into fluffybird
I feel like Duck will be more chill with flirting while Red will probably be very awkward and weird about it… lmao
See these torture devices? This is what I have to deal with when I get too excited/overloaded with work and I draw and draw and draw with no regard for the warning aches in my wrists.
I know a lot of other artists suffer from tendonitis/carpal tunnel syndrome, and webcomic artists are especially prone to it since we spend a lot of time hunched over keyboards too. (I’ve noticed typing seems to aggravate it more than drawing.)
Here are some tips I have learned the hard way:
Don’t assume the pain will “go away eventually” and just keep drawing. Trust me, it will not. It’s only downhill from here. The pain means you’ve already injured yourself. Take a break.
If you do press on anyway, you’ll have to wait longer to heal. When I first had my doctor see me, he said to take a minimum two week break from drawing and typing. If you are like me, that’s like asking me to stop breathing for that long. Do you want to die?? Do you?? I didn’t think so. Put the pen down and take a break.
It takes a LONG time to heal. It took me about two years to stop feeling the effects when I messed my wrists up really bad the first time.
Once you feel better, the instinct is to immediately jump right back into drawing/typing/whatever activity caused your repeated stress injury (hey I’m not judging) but be careful not to overdo it and hurt yourself all over again! It’s not like a videogame health bar that always replenishes back to full. I’ve noticed that once I got tendonitis, it never fully went away, and the more often I induced it with bad habits, the sooner it comes back after doing the same amount of drawing. Pay attention to your activity and to your body telling you it’s time to stop before it hurts.
This video of wrist exercises helped reduce my pain a lot, and is also good for preventing it in the first place.
Take care of yourself, artists. Your hands are your livelyhood. Don’t take them for granted!
I love httyd, fish edition
duck really wants to be a dad
FOR THE FISH!
you need to have 3 drinks with you at all times:
drink one: water. this one's water. can't beat the og
drink two: fun drink. this is a drink with colors or perhaps bubbles in it.
drink three: substance drink. on weekdays this is usually a caffeine drink. for the agonies. on weekends it may be an alcohol drink instead. also for the agonies. sometimes you can combine fun drink and substance drink into one. not always though
Buttercup - peach - teal