assign yourself a fucked up instrument
accordion
kazoo
penny whistle or bass recorder
(hyper) bass flute
harmonica
melodica
subcontrabass saxophone
wood frog and fish
otamatone
bagpipes
noise dept.

Origami Around

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
DEAR READER

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Peter Solarz
todays bird
Claire Keane
🪼
ojovivo

PR's Tumblrdome
KIROKAZE

blake kathryn

No title available

JVL
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

⁂
Today's Document

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@ken-draws
assign yourself a fucked up instrument
accordion
kazoo
penny whistle or bass recorder
(hyper) bass flute
harmonica
melodica
subcontrabass saxophone
wood frog and fish
otamatone
bagpipes
Well it being black history month is reminding me how I wanted to doodle something like this down for a while. Since it’s been a lil detail I always take notice of in drawings. These are very simple depictions but I hope it’s enough to give the general idea! Feel free to reblog
im not dead ive just had school, complete with two doodles
I forgot I have to be active here so here’s my Twitter tutorial on how to draw folds I made a while back to help a friend!
Was working on some skin tone grids and thought I'd share for any other artists out there ^^
(Please give credit when sharing, especially off-platform)
disclaimer: I am east asian. if anyone who is not white sees anything wrong with my phrasing, inaccuracies, or insensitivity, or something I missed, please feel free to add on. I’m just one person with one perspective; none of what I say should be taken as The Singular way to draw an Asian character. if you havent done so already, please take the effort to expand your view of Asian culture outside this one tutorial.
if a white person reblogs this and adds something stupid I’m going to bite and kick you like a wild animal
I LOVE this post and wanted to add some additional info, cause I see a lot of people who assume that drawing asian hair is the same as drawing white hair. This is not the case! There’s more to it than just the color.
Image description for the original post and my addition are underneath the read more at the end.
Thank you for reading! Once again, image description for my images and OP’s images are under the cut.
Just like OP, I’m only one single person, so if anyone wants to correct me or add something I missed, then go for it. And further disclaimer, there are exceptions to everything I’ve said in this post, and it only applies to East and Southeast asian people who are either not mixed or white-mixed, as those are the hair types I’m most familiar with.
Keep reading
I’d like to add that there are Black people of non-African decent in Asia. We exist. So the whole “I won’t draw Black people in anime because it’s set in ~Asia~” is absolutely bullshit (besides the fact that those of African decent also live there). The so called “negrito” ethnic group is comprised of many different cultures throughout south and southeast Asia and are considered Black (they have dark skin and coiled ‘Afro-texture’ hair) Additionally, the Moluccan and Papuan people of southeast Indonesia are Black.
Also regarding hair, naturally curly hair absolutely is a thing in e/s/se Asia. Our hair runs the gamut from loose wavy curls to tight, kinky coiled hair.
Blonde or red hair and blue eyes are also possible in Maluku and Papua, due to genetic quirk that has nothing to do with having white heritage.
On to types of curly hair Asian people can have:
[A picture of Sandra Oh with a long, curly shag haircut, wearing a pink blouse against a white backdrop] Sandra Oh is a great example of an east Asia person with curly hair. She has wavy/curly hair.
[A picture of Aarti Sequeria, an Indian woman with medium skin tone, shoulder length medium curls, wearing a green blouse against a colorful background]
Curly hair is also common in south Asia. This is Aarti Sequeria, an Indian person with tighter curls.
Then we get to the tightest curls.
[Three pictures of young people from Maluku or Papua Indonesia. The first shows two boys in blue shirts with dark skin and curly hair. The boy on the left has loose, dark curls and the boy on the right has dark red-blonde tightly coiled curls. The second picture shows a child with very dark skin with red undertones. They have tightly curled dark red-orange hair. The last one shows a boy with dark brown skin, dark ash blonde hair, and dark grey eyes. He is not wearing a shirt. End description]
These are all people from Maluku and Papua in southeast Indonesia. This is their natural hair color and texture. Also note how warm their skin tone is. As a note, the reason these are all pictures of children is that more often than not, those with blonde hair as children will have their hair darken as they get older. Additionally, note how the roots are much darker than the ends. This is because most of the blonde hair comes from sun bleaching rather than it coming out of the scalp blonde.
My family is from Maluku and I have cousins with the same bright red hair, and both of their parents have dark brown/black hair. I also have family who have blue eyes, but both of their parents have brown eyes. So while it’s very, very uncommon, it is possible for an Asian person to be blonde. However, unless you are depicting someone from these areas, the blue eyes/blonde hair is still very much a don’t do this, especially if you are a white artist.
There are so many ways to look Asian. So many hair textures, so many skin colors. Asia is a lot more diverse than the west depicts it to be.
Oh sweet mother that’s useful
Here’s just the template
Original tweet (thread has different language versions and a PNG image!)
Tweet with Google Forms version!
Also OP has a tumblr!
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.
WAIT INDIA INK JS WATERPROOF ONCE IT DRIES????? THE ENTIRE REASON IVE AVOIDED MARKERS MY ENTIRE LIFE IS BECAUSE JNK BLEEDS AND YOURE TELLING ME INDIA INK IS
F U C K I N G W A T E R P R O O F
oh man your teachers did not do there jobs!
-Yo painters, use pencil if u must underdraw beneath an oil painting, the lead is archival but ideally you should be doing underdrawings in a muted earth tones (siennas, umbers, ochres or earth green) with some titanium white added to it. (The white nearly matches the canvas and earth tones naturally blend with all colors on top unless u do super thin glaze washes).
-Trying to make a natural looking warm black? Don’t use black straight from tube, Mix alizarin crimson and viridan. add raw umber to adjust for light depth.
-If your into mixed media ALWAYS use acrylic first and oil on top (the gesso on primed canvas is acrylic based and oil sits on top of it great). NEVER put acrylic paint on top of oil, the acrylic will crackle/decompose and fall apart/off the canvas.
-India ink is permanent and if your using ink from a jar it should say it’s permanence. professional art grade pens usually have there permanace listed either on the pen or the companies website.
-Red cinnabar is poisonous, DO NOT EAT IT, no matter how much like fruit loops it smells.
-Translucent and transparent are NOT the same. translucent is *shiny* and a cloudier color, ideal for mixing usually ordor making vibrant colors like for eyes, cars, etc. Transparent is matte and usually a 50% transparency from an opaque color.
-ALWAYS DO A TEST SWATCH OF ANY NEW MATERIAL.
-any paint made with “true alizarin crimson” “red lake” and “chrome yellow” pigment is a fugitive paint. Fugitive means the pigment fades dramatically and disappears over time, (usually 5 to 15 years) lots of van goghs paintings have this problem. be very careful with these pigments. Alizarin crimson especially smells extremely sweet and like fruit loops or fruit loops, don’t eat it.
-gauche is a mix of watercolor and ink, proceed with caution as this material can be an asshole.
-Watercolor can be made darker/thicker by letting it dry slightly in cake form or in liquid form and can be dry brushed if u get the timing down.
-Paint liquid rubber or lay down thin pieces of painters tape on edges in watercolor paintings to Prevent bleeding between lines if u need super sharp edges.
-always tape down the entire paper edges when u paint with watercolor to a board to prevent the paper from curling as it dries.
-add salt directly into wet watercolor paintings to absorb pigment and make shit look like space.
-Always paint in well ventilated areas and avoid getting lots of paint on your hands. lots of paint is made with heavy metals and can cause cancer.
-natural materials aren’t always safe, especially
-Ones u collect yourself, do your research before grinding, burning, sanding these things especially indoors.
-use NATURAL bristles on your brushes with oil paint and SYNTHETIC bristles on your brushes for acrylic and watercolor. synthetic bristles literally break off into oil paint and stick into your painting, and natural bristles can’t handle the weight of acrylic paint and rip into 15 directions. Use hard boar bristle for the underdrawing/underpainting of an oil painting as it will force the paint into the canvas pours more effectively cause it’s stronger, use softer bristles for outer layers of oil painting and blending, boar will pierce outer layers and is to hard for anything but the first layer. can’t tell what u have? clean it up and brush it on your face, softer it is the better it is as doing outer layers of color.
-if you have a decent painters’ tape, you can prewet your watercolor paper, tape it to a surface & weight it down with some books to press it flat while it’s wet and help keep it from buckling later once dry, this is especially useful because for some reason, watercolor block is half again as expensive or more than a comparable sized pad or large sheets to cut down, even by the same brand
-natural sable is good for watercolor if you can afford it, i have two smaller brushes i shelled out for to try it, and while i probably didn’t treat the finer point one right, the other one is a miracle i’ve had for nearly 20 years.
-chinese calligraphy brush sets are fantastic for large work and washes and way, way cheaper most times than standard brushes, and it doesn’t seem to matter how cheap they are, either. they may shed a little, but they do a really good job holding and distributing water.
Rb for any art students
I love how more than one tip was “do not eat art supplies”
as requested- my zine about fat and plus size body types from instagram!💖 happy drawing everyone!
hi folks! just spent a few hours transcribing this. please reblog this version for our visually impaired friends!!
(this is my first time transcribing something so i really hope i got everything...!)
Image 1 ID [Title picture of the op standing, grinning with her arms out on a pink background, with one word on each shoulder with one just above the knee. The whole zine is colored with soft reddish-pinks and other pastels.]
Written Image 1 ID: "Let's Talk Tum!"
Image 2 ID [The first page focuses on anatomy and shapes. There is a floating head in the top right, followed by a figure in the bottom left where various body parts are indicated by colorful shapes. The last sentence of the page is overlaid with a background of a red circle, a warm-teal triangle, and a golden square.]
Written Image 2 ID: "First off* (before stepping too deep into body types, you should have a grasp on basic anatomy. it's helped me a whole bunch!) Let's talk about basic shapes. The human body can be broken up into many of these! simplifying it this way is essential to understanding body types and can help with anatomy. For example, shapes give us a good look at important intersections on the body. i.e. the bend in your arms. [arrow pointing to the intersection in the lower left hand figure's arms.] *A good reference I often use is how the tips of the fingers usually rest in this section of the thighs. [a red circle pointing out the area where the tips of the fingers would lie, about a quarter of the way down the thigh.]tl;dr: shapes help you build the body.
Image 3 ID [The next page displays the title at the top, followed by two graphics. one displays a common video game slider of left to right, with the left being thin and the right being fat. The second graphic displays the fat body to the left of a circular stat chart, with a branching hexagonal shape inside indicating where weight falls. It is labeled (going clockwise) belly, hips, legs, head, arms, chest.]
Written Image 3 ID: "Now you're getting it! Let's talk weight distribution! most older character creators do things this way. But instead of thinking of weight on a slider like this one... [arrow pointing to the first diagram.] think of one like this. [arrow pointing to the second diagram.] This lends itself to a much wider variety of body types.
Image 4 ID [Title is once again displayed at the top of the page. This segment is split into two pages, with the format carrying through. on the left of the first image, there are three pictures of belly references laid out horizontally. The top is a dark-skinned pregnant person holding their stomach- image is from the breast down and cuts off at the hips. There is a red line drawing a circle around the shape of the belly. The second picture is a light-skinned person pinching their belly fat, the image cuts off at the hips and breasts again, highlighting the midsection. There is a red curved line following the bottom of the belly. The third example is a picture of a brown skinned person with their hand on the left side of their stomach- picture cuts off just after the breasts and hips. There is a bumped red line following the indent of the belly. Each picture is immediately followed to the right by a drawing of the body type from the picture, each at a different angle than the picture.]
Written Image 4 ID: "So, what now? Let's peek at how that weight distribution can look! (as a reminder, none of these are inherently 'better' than the others.) [following the first image and drawing.] tummies like this are often seen in bloating or pregnancy. Note how stiff and round it is. Most of this is not fat.**that doesn't mean it never can be, though! [following the second image and drawing.] just your average, everyday tummy! This is totally normal. I'd say most people have a little bit of this belly fat. [following the third image and drawing.] This is about where I fall. notice how things start to come in twos. A lot of these bellies have really beautiful stretch marks! [page cuts off, CONT> written in the lower right hand corner.]
Image 5 ID [continuation of the last page's layout. Three more bellies followed by drawings are layed out from left to right, stacked horizontally. The first image is of a light-skinned person with the image sectioning off just the belly. There are two distinct folds in the belly fat, with a red line outlining the curve on the outside, and one marking the fold on the inside. Next two images display scars on both of the models- with the first having had it's appendix removed. {op note- i've been told that appendix scars usually don't appear as pronounced as this image's nowadays. Medical advancement yadda yadda. Older characters may still have this indentation, however. It's up to you.} The picture following that is of a pregnant person having given birth, with stretch marks on either side of their navel followed by a c-section scar just above the pelvis. Each image is followed by a drawing of said picture with a different angle.]
Written Image 5 ID: "[following the first image and drawing.] This is where a lot of people stop drawing tummies. This is a "B belly," also known as a double belly. Contrary to popular belief, this is purely genetic. A lot of people wrongly think bellies like this are the result of tight clothing, which is just not true. [before the next two images, centered on page] But wait, there's more! [following second image and drawing.] This lovely tummy has had it's appendix removed! [following third image and drawing.] This belly has a c-section scar and cool stretch marks. [separated at the bottom of the page.] There are other places that weight can be distributed, though. And speaking of stretch marks...
Image 6 ID [The next section highlights stretch marks and cellulite. There is a collage on the left of stretch marks present on a variety of skin tones, in both light and darker colors. These images are followed at the bottom by a diagram of places where stretch marks are commonly present, front and back. The figures have the left side of their bodies circled from the neck and outstretched arms down to the butt and thighs, while the right side displays the patterns where stretch marks are commonly seen. In the middle of the page there is a guide on coloring stretch marks, with a lighter skin tone on the left followed by a darker one. Both have drawings of light and dark stretch marks, preceded by the filters used on each. (multiply and screen.)]
Written Image 6 ID: Stretch marks! I love stretch marks, and not enoughpeople draw them. They can show up almost anywhere, and it's a huge myth they're only found on pregnant people or people who have been pregnant. [arrow pointing to color guide.] I commonly use the same skin color I'm working with, but put a filter over it. [indentation (no longer following arrow)] also, they aren't exclusively light or dark! I have both types. They come in all different patterns and lengths, but avoid symmetry. [arrow pointing to bottom diagrams.] Common cellulite and stretch mark spots: i mean, look at all these! I couldn't even fit legs on here. Sometimes I get them on the back of my legs or knees.
Image 7 ID [Title is displayed at the top of the page followed by two drawings of people showing off stretch marks/cellulite. The left picture shows someone in a binder with tattoos on their left forearm and right shoulder, a hand on their hip. There are stretchmarks on the side of their belly, front, underneath, and on the outer sides of their thighs. Right picture shows someone with a hand on their butt, showing cellulite underneath. Flowery patterns surround both figures.]
Written image 7 ID: "'wait, stretch marks or cellulite?' [following the two figures.] The main difference is that cellulite is genetic. however, the terms are basically interchangeable, at this point. Who knew body types and genetics had so much in common?? (Geneticists, duh.) [graphic of text taken from Livestrong.com.] 'Your skin is attached to your muscles with cords of connective tissue. Between your skin and muscle lies a layer of fat. [highlighted text for the rest of the graphic.] Cellulite develops when fat cells accumulate underneath the skin and push against the skin while the connective cords pull down. This causes a bulging that creates the characteristic dimpling of cellulite. As the name implies, stretch marks develop as a result of rapid stretching of the skin. [End graphic. citation follows.] (I learned the difference from these studies, too! The point is, both are completely natural.
Image 8 ID [The drawings on this page show other common places where fat can rest including breasts, of which there are two drawings of, followed by an outstretched arm, followed by a pelvis cutting off just above the knees. At the very bottom right there is a small image of a leg.]
Written Image 8 ID: Other common places where fat can rest: [above the first two drawings.] Breasts [arrow pointing to a circle drawn just underneath the breasts and stomach.] Notice this area here! Sometimes there's a slight fold between the breasts and stomach. This is, again, often mistaken as the result of tight bras or binders, but is also completely genetic. [arrow pointing to the fingers on the outstretched arm graphic.] (fat can also affect the shape of the hands and fingers.) [arrow pointing to a circle drawn around the underneath of the bicep on the same graphic.] (also a hot spot for stretch marks!) 'bingo wings' are not exclusive to elderly characters. Personally, my arms are very soft, since I have a decent amount of muscle as well as fat concentrated here. [two circles describing the graphics, one labeled "arms" while the one underneath says "butt and thighs." following a red circle pointing out the fold between hip fat and thigh fat where undergarments usually squeeze.] There are sometimes folds here, again, purely genetic. [arrow pointing to the small leg in the lower right hand corner.] Make sure the lower leg tapers proportionately to the upper leg! {op note- discrepancy here- some legs and arms don't taper so nicely. "stubby" looking arms and legs can and are just as beautiful as ones that are "proportionately accurate."} [arrows pointing to the side of the thigh and the inner thigh, where there is a circle right under the pelvis.] (more stretch mark spots.)
Image 9 ID [Tile of the page appears at the top once again. This is followed by two drawings, one of a profile shot of the op facing to the left side of the page, gesturing to her neck and looking back at it. The one to the right is a much more cartoony doodle of the op's face, smiling facing the reader. flowery scribbles surround the smaller head. Underneath there are several body types lined up at the bottom of the page with colorful graphics filling in shapes behind the figures. They include: apple, a red circle, pear, a lime green pear shape, hourglass, two connected golden triangles stacked facing each other, triangle, a warm-teal triangle with a point facing the head of the figure, and inverted triangle, a gentle purple triangle facing the pelvis of the figure.]
Written image 9 ID: Last but not least: don't forget spots like the neck that can be easily forgotten! Double chins are very common, and folds on the back of the neck are, too. [two circles pointing these spots out on the first figure.] And remember the chubby face! Some general shapes to remember: [graphic of body types follows.]
Image 10 ID [the page is covered in soft translucent purple stars, with more body types dancing and interacting on it. The first, separated from the others, is a figure with one arm in the air and another on their chest, the diamond body type. They are a light blue diamond with points facing the pelvis and head. This is followed by another array of figures at the bottom: the bottom hourglass, a light tan hourglass shape with a smaller triangle being on top and the bigger one on the bottom, who is locking hands with the top hourglass, a darker tan hourglass with the larger triangle being on top and the smaller on the bottom. The spoon, a yellowish-lime green spoon shape with the handle sticking up into the torso, is talking to the round body type, a pink oval in the center of the figure. The rectangle body type is dancing off to the right, lost in the moment as the diamond seems to be. They are a seafoam rectangle following the torso.] Image
Written image 10 ID: "But there are so many others!
Experiment, have fun, and remember that:
[a list following the flow of the page.]
-Fat is not a dirty word
-Being fat is not inherently unhealthy
-Gaining or losing weight does not devalue you as a person
-Weight can change rapidly and over time
-Weight should not be a joke or subject to mockery
-You can be beautiful at any size!
[End ID.]
fatphobes hate this post so much ♡ reblog with the transcribed version to piss them off :)
given the recent national controversy regarding the graphic novels “maus” by art spiegelman i can imagine many people would like to read them. for the time being they can be found on this google drive for free.
i cant.
Hurt/comfort writers be like...
the superior type of story
friendly fucking reminder that a curved sword has greater cutting power because the force of the swing is distributed across a smaller impact area. a straight sword is better for thrusting
black history month is coming to a closeeee but i have something that’ll help you draw black characters in any month! if it was helpful then hey… here’s my kofi 😏
oh god oh fuck oh god oh fc ck o h gdo
Ok but f’real though, this is such a good example of feminine clothing actually tailored to fit a masculine body.
I think a not insignificant part of the gendered clothing issue is that because men’s clothing is by nature looser fitting, women can wear it and have it look decent on them because the clothing will still fit more or less the way it’s supposed to. The reverse isn’t true - because women’s clothing tends to be tighter, it’s often not going to look good on a man’s body that doesn’t have curves in the same places. But that doesn’t mean that a dress is always going to look terrible on a man, it just means that those dresses need to be purpose built for different body types. And that would help everyone: trans, cis, fat, thin, muscular, skinny, etc
I’ve reblogged this before and I’ll do it again, both for the statement of how important cut is to making clothes look good on your body, and for the absolutely gorgeous man in the video.
that's jamie! theyre a nonbinary circus performer and they're pretty cool. their tiktok:
@jamie.double 147.0k Followers, 179 Following, 3.0m Likes - Watch awesome short videos created by jamie.double
dear encanto fanartists :))))))))))
Shoutout to my queen, rarity for teaching me how to draw curls at age 7
I HAVE DISCOVERED A NEW WAY TO DRAW A SPECIFIC KIND OF INTERESTING NOSE SHAPES
STEP 1: DRAW ALMOST THE ENTIRE NOSE BRIDGE LINE THING
STEP 2: SELECT THE NOSE
STEP 3: USE THE WARP TOOL BADLY
I ALMOST GAVE A CHARACTER THE MY IRL NOSE SHAPE WHICH WOULD HAVE BEEN EPIC IF THAT CHARACTER WAS NOT THE EXACT KIND OF CHARACTER I WOULD PREFER TO NOT LOOK LIKE ME
I-
Wow
A tree trunk throne in Kendall, England.
Doesn’t look safe for a mortal.
if you sit there you belong to the fae
That’s the Fae’s problem
That is such a strong, bold, confident statement and I respect you for it.