I have 5 Commission slots open a month, btw, so if you're interested in purchasing some custom art, feel free to message me!
i don't do bad sauce passes
One Nice Bug Per Day
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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ē„ę„ / Permanent Vacation

blake kathryn

if i look back, i am lost
Today's Document
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Game of Thrones Daily
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Peter Solarz
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@dyogenesisart
I have 5 Commission slots open a month, btw, so if you're interested in purchasing some custom art, feel free to message me!
I drew my friend @tectonicrobot 's dragon OC! He was very fun and I loved trying to capture the cockiness! Thanks for letting me draw him!
Why the FUCK did Tumblr move the post date to hide it??? @staff
I have completed art of Synth, a superhero character commission from memnarch! I had a lot of fun with this one, especially getting to experiment with more dramatic lighting!
I drew this D&D Dragonborn Monk who went through a mummy situation as a commissiom for one of my friends! The design was so fun to figure out!
Here is another Secret Santa, an (admittedly) suggestive scene of the interdimensional alien Spooky, with one of his cult members!
I drew this cutesy sleeping ghost for my friend ArcanumGhost! You can find him at his twist channel here: https://www.twitch.tv/arcanumghost
I drew this for a Secret Santa of someone's OC Opal, a Pathfinder Rogue! The background is based on a Bob Ross video, and i love the feel of the winter scene!
@factual-fantasy
i'd like to add that the shadow color isnt necessarily dictated entirely by the primary light source, but the bounce light! so for the example of a sunny environment, the reason the shadows are blue are because of the light from the blue sky reflects across the environment; but, if the character were to be under tree cover, the bounce light would be coming from the leaves and thus the shadow would look greener.
Yee yee!!! You got it right on the nose!
Bounce light is something I didn't cover but I adore it!
Gotta work on my bounce light šŖ
My good friends this is called using a
Gamut Mask
(image via )
James Gurney is an absolute master and gives really good clarity on colour techniques. Yes, it is traditional paint focused, but the principles are the same. Yes it is informed by the environmental colour but as a painting technique it is achieved this way!
I would also suggest that in digital processing, rather than apply a regular colour layer at a mid opacity, try out the different types of layers, Eg. Screen or Multiply. This can give you at least a starting point to help direct your colour palette.
Layer Blend Modes are so so so important to working in digital art. There's a ton of math that goes into figuring out how the layers should blend together, which is why some of the modes you can pick are literally called Multiply, Add, Divide, and Difference (that's subtraction). The graphics software takes the color values of your base and blend layers and runs a calculation to get your resulting layer appearance. The ones that don't have specifically mathematical sounding names are still doing calculations, but they're more complicated (think linear Algebra and higher). Some of them, like dodge and burn, are named for actual photo editing techniques.
While it's not super important to know about the mathematical side of blend modes, I think it's worth knowing at least enough about how each of the categories of blend modes works and why they do what they do; if for no other reason than having a starting point when you start experimenting with them in your work.
An overview of the basic blend modes and how they work from Genevieve's Design Studio: Accessible with minimal color knowledge; practical and illustration focused. https://youtu.be/kMc87hQrJd0?si=TWCB365pKSfWS8p0. (16 minutes) This creator also has a ton of free resources you can download, including a Blend Modes cheatsheet, but fair warning: you have to create an account to get them!
Want to learn even more about the math-y stuff? It has great film visuals! A video from FilmmakerIQ: You need some basic knowledge of RGB color models, understanding of values/luma, and at least a tenuous understanding of Algebraic formulas. (26 minutes) https://youtu.be/F7_kaTP7_W4?si=x0urqXZ8f51nQVKl
This is uncomfortable to post, but I need some help.
I'm dealing with a dental emergency and need a root canal to avoid losing a tooth.
My immediate goal is $1200 to cover the start of treatment. As a mother supporting two teenagers on one income, I canāt absorb this all at once.
So Iām opening $50 custom art commissions to help get there. Iāll work closely with you to make something meaningful.
If you canāt commission, sharing still helps a lot. Thank you for reading.
https://ko-fi.com/dyogenesis
I've made $280/$1200 which has been so excellent, thank you to everyone who has been able to help. I'm still working to get this tooth fixed. Please reblog if you can!
This is uncomfortable to post, but I need some help.
I'm dealing with a dental emergency and need a root canal to avoid losing a tooth.
My immediate goal is $1200 to cover the start of treatment. As a mother supporting two teenagers on one income, I canāt absorb this all at once.
So Iām opening $50 custom art commissions to help get there. Iāll work closely with you to make something meaningful.
If you canāt commission, sharing still helps a lot. Thank you for reading.
https://ko-fi.com/dyogenesis
Someone tried to send me an ask but it was blank?? Tumblr's weird
I genuinely feel like Iām going insane sometimes
Some more of my thoughts and a sketch page of myself because I love me
Today I drew some Fanart of the great performance by Ed Gathegi of the character Mr Terrific in the new Superman movie! This was a fun piece though it took me a while to get the face right, I really wanted it to be recognizable as the actor!
I drew a commission for my friend @tectonicrobot 's deer-taur Pronke! It was a lot of fun and definitely an anatomy challenge but one I think I was able to work out!
For my next art I drew another scene from my Curse of Strahd game! This is Mori, played by my friend @sapphic-design-is-my-passion, in one of the nightmares I wrote for her about her Dark Patron, a mysterious entity known as The Pale Queen!
How I Study Anatomy
Everyone says NEVER TRACE!! THAT'S ART THEFT! Ok but we can do a little crime in the name of Learning.
Trace to learn, not to earn.
I like to take my own photos, but you can study whatever you want. Link back to original photos, and don't post copied artwork unless the artist is dead, cool with it, or both.
As always with learning, start every sketch with the intent to throw it away (trash for paper, quitting without saving for digital) This takes the pressure off and lets you make Bad Art, which is very important.
So let's make Bad Art of a Deer because I happen to have one handy
Start with a photo of your subject in a nice/neutral pose with all four feet visible. (so not like me)
Freehand copy it. Try not to stylize, focusing instead of matching proportions and pose. Don't get too detailed!
It's ok if your art looks terrible and has broken legs. I've drawn LOTS of deer so I have a leg up. Everyone's art sucks in their own eyes and here's where mine went wrong:
Either lasso-distort (recommended for beginners) or redraw a copy of your first sketch with your reference behind it (scaled to match the main body of your sketch)
Put the original and modified sketches together and compare the differences. Write it down if you want. This shows you where your eyes saw things the wrong size, so you can correct for that next time.
After learning about both deer and yourself, try freehand copying again.
Marvel at your newfound knowledge and skill!
but there's always room for improvement
You can stop here and move on to your real drawing, Or do another freehand-fix-compare cycle. I actually overcorrected my "draws heads too big" and veered into "heads too small."
Another note on tracing: Learning HOW to trace is more important than anything you could learn By tracing. Draw the Anatomy, not the outline. In real life, things don't have outlines, they have bones.
These are from the same shoot which is extra useful for consistency. The lines are minimal and follow where the animals joints are, and only important parts are drawn.
You won't know what Important Parts means right off the bat, which is where in-depth study comes in. You need to do learn the hard parts to do the easy parts right.
Next up: how to study bones and muscles.
How to study Bones and Muscles
"Study the anatomy study the anatomy" but they never tell you HOW. It's not "read a book," It's more like flailing around wildly and crashing your browser from too many tabs.
This is going to be about How to Make a bones and muscle chart. Because even if your art sucks, you learn so much more by doing than by seeing.
References I gathered: X X X X X X X X
Get Set up. Get a photo, like above, but it doesn't have to be the same photo. And now... gather reference.
We'll start with bones. Search up "[animal] skeleton" and get photos or super scientific illustration. Add in things like "top view" to spice it up.
Next, search "[animal] skeleton sketchfab." This pulls up 3D models that you can rotate in your browser. Remember that these are art and the anatomy is only as good as the artist, so pick a good one.
Time for bone!
The spine is the most important, and in a lot of animals it will surprise you. Draw it in over your photo and then add spikes because skeletons are punk. These are not scientific and I didn't count them because their number doesn't matter to art. So you better be referencing from scientists and not me!
The rest of the bones and some notes. These are my notes to myself about things I want to remember. My personal discoveries in anatomy that made my art better. You can make the same notes but also make sure you have your own thoughts on there as well. that's how you help yourself the best. Be as detailed or vague as you want.
Same deal with muscle. Here are my personal notes to myself. Label stuff that is important to you. I actually grouped a bunch of muscles together based on what is visible from the outside. Muscles are way more complicated than this, but Baby's First Anatomy Chart gets to be simple.
This is good enough for me because I have intimate knowledge of the other muscles working under and over these ones. Feel free to add as many or as few muscles as you like. You chart your own course.
This is very VERY much not an anatomical chart. I'm sure there's nerds out there pulling their hair out looking at this. But listen, it works for art!
And you know the wildest part about this?
I don't need to look at it to use it. The act of making your own anatomy chart puts that knowledge in your brain. Like how you can make "cheat sheets" even for tests that don't allow them - the act of making the sheet helps you remember what you struggle with most.
And after all that complexity? Your simplification will be based on Real Knowledge and you'll put those random circles in the right spots.
Look at all this hard work you've done. Eventually this will be second nature to you.
Show me what you make! I'd love to see what creatures yall make anatomy charts of.