🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
Peter Solarz
KIROKAZE

JVL
Cosmic Funnies

Origami Around
RMH
we're not kids anymore.

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todays bird
h

roma★
Mike Driver

blake kathryn
Cosimo Galluzzi
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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will byers stan first human second
NASA
occasionally subtle

seen from Türkiye
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seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from North Macedonia

seen from Brazil

seen from France
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Morocco
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
@maseru-haseru
Vale of Tears
(bokuto is overwhelming, and akaashi can’t hide it anymore)
Hi Chira, I got a question, Im trying to change my art style from anime to semirealistic/realistic since I don't want to draw anime anymore. I want to have an art style where I won't have to feel like anime is the only thing that inspires me. But when I draw realistic, it looks stupid! I'm scared I can't get out of the anime style and will never be able to get used to it or change it. What can I to not go back to drawing anime only cause im used to it?? ): sorry i had a limit to how much i type.
Oh man, there’s a few layers to this…
Well, I think the first step is not looking down on what anime can offer you. There’s plenty of anime-derived styles that lean on semi-realism in design (consider: works by Satoshi Kon, Urasawa Naoki, Inoue Takehiko, and many others). I point this out because if you want to take your style in a more, let’s say, refined and detailed direction, you can look at styles that’ve already successfully done that and study them/find them inspirational. Please remember the only thing that really defines “anime style” is that it’s originating in Japan, otherwise the art styles are as diverse and complex as any other cultural visual aesthetic in the world. I mean, saying something is “western style” is just as silly, Superman comics doesn’t look anything like Powerpuff Girls in style, right?
Second, I would also like you to ask yourself if what you want is to be inspired by things not anime because of style or because of status. Are you trying to change your style to get away from the reputation of admitting you like anime? If so, why? You don’t need to reply to me, this is something for you to think about. Trying to define your style by what you think your influences should be tends to be a very exasperating and inefficient corner many artists trap themselves into.
Third, for actual advice on how to develop your style in a different direction (whatever direction that may be), the best start is to do copy or trace exercises of the illustrations you want to emulate. These are very helpful as exercises to get you to understand and study the artist’s technique of how they came to that result. Additionally, let your stuff look stupid. Whenever you develop something new in your work it is an experiment, and experiments can fail! And that ABSOLUTELY needs to be allowed, the fact you can and will fail in your early attempts, because the experiment is not important for the result it’s about what you learned by doing it. If your attempts look stupid or hack-kneed, try to study why it didn’t work or where it went wrong, and refine your next experiment and see if the results are different. Slowly and surely you’ll see your results develop. This is the process of developing art technique in general.
And, lastly, your art style doesn’t define you, you define your art style. Whether it’s anime, realistic, saturday morning cartoon or whatever… if you drew it, it’s automatically your style. Which means you should draw what actually excites you (WHATEVER that inspiration is), not what you think should inspire you. Generally when you follow what actually gets you excited by art, you’ll organically take your art in the direction you want it to go in.
Oh my god.
I JUST watched this again and loved this scene. I love the girl’s reaction to the demon bunny toy because it is such an improviser’s reaction.
To an improviser EVERYTHING is a gift. And we love all of our gifts. “It’s so ugly! I love it!” Ugly isn’t a negative evaluation. It’s just what that gift is, and we love it in all its ugliness. And then she immediately plays with it.
That’s the nature of improv. Imagine if you approached everything in life with that sort of enthusiasm, joy, and acceptance.
“What about you? What would you say to him?”
All right, I answered your question, now help me with blocking! | Haikyuu! s.2.e.8
Bokuto-san just ran away
I did not! I just got around it!
I was genuinely surprised i haven’t draw Akaashi yet so i rushed to doodle a thing– i figured halfway painting this that he’s outrageously pretty aaa (ALSO COMMISSION MY ASS IM POOR AS HECK)
Akaashi Keiji’s aesthetic: Glasses & the boyfriend’s shirt.
@lunchtimeboi ※ Posted with permission from the artist. Please do not remove the source or repost without permission.
haunted house reactions for halloween…! ;▽; (3rd gym & managers)