water studies (1-2 hours on each)
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he has a special place in my heart
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more landscapes
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soooooo, i’m hustling!
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I found these digital studies from 2010 and it got me thinking how much time changes perspective on our own art.
I hated these studies, I don't think I even shared them anywhere. But now I think they're fine, they had a purpose, and it's a nice reminder of what kind of stuff I found interesting back then. Something to chew on!
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furry studies 1
digital/photoshop
2024
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Shitty studies (dry-heaving)
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Color studies pt 2! The prior batch came from film stills, so I headed to Art Station this time to look at environment illustrations. All images on the left come from the following artists:
Alena Aenami
Denis Wipart
SiChen Wang
Anastasia Shestak
Obviously they are extremely skilled, so please go shower them in praise. My copies are waaaaaaay over-rendered, so when I start the final batch I'm going to be setting a timer and stopping at 1 hr as instructed. It's taking significantly more brainpower than I had anticipated to manually match color. For some reason I find this fairly easy with traditionally media, but digitally it's so much harder. I also continue to be surprised at how relative color is, and how minute shifts in hue/value/saturation can look wildly different in context in an image. These studies come from a Schoolism Course on Light and Color by Nathan Fowkes.
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Our Digital Legacy: an Archival Perspective (Moss & Gollins, 2017)
Author(s): Michael S. Moss and Tim J. Gollins
Date: 2017
Abstract:
Many have discussed and debated the preservation of traces from our digital world, mostly from a technical perspective. A great deal of this discussion has been predicated on the false assumptions that little will survive (the so-called digital black hole) and that rapidly changing file formats and software upgrades will make what survives difficult, if not impossible, to read. This narrative has been coupled with alarmist stories about the high cost of digital curation in trusted digital repositories. Taken together, all this scaremongering has diverted attention from the other core principles of archival science: appraisal (what to keep), sensitivity review (identifying material that cannot be disclosed for ethical or legal reasons), and access.1 The way that archival science uses these core principles to respond to the “supernova” of digital material that will actually survive will define our digital legacy.
Find the full article here!
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a study i did because i realized idk how to draw environments at all LMAO
a few people have asked, so this is a now a print <3
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also never posted this photo study from like 2021 i think?
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The impact Spiderverse has on art and artists is INSANE. Everyone is drawing, everyone is CREATING. From colour studies, to the art style studies, to making sona influenced by the movies' character designs. AI generated images are nowhere to be seen, and I hope they're going to stay buried in the uncreative pits they belong in... the world is in balance.
Seeing all the works are... WOW
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Back to my nonsense again, with sheep this time!
All animals with hooves feel way too chonky for how thin their legs are. It works I guess lol
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This is Bisan Owda (@wizard_bisan1 on IG), she's a young journalist who's been documenting the daily life in Gaza, Palestine since before October of last year and continues to do so now, as her and her family have been displaced by Israel, her home and workplace destroyed in the bombings. If you don't already follow her, I highly suggest to do so, as she takes interviews from the local people in the refugee camps and provides a fantastic insight into Palestinians as a nation, their culture and the horrors they face under the Israeli apartheid regime in their own land.🇵🇸🇵🇸🇵🇸
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