Nice moves, Mae
Acquired Stardust
h

★
Not today Justin

No title available

tannertan36
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Origami Around
Xuebing Du
tumblr dot com
Three Goblin Art
noise dept.
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

JVL
No title available
Today's Document
RMH

Kaledo Art

shark vs the universe
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from T1
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Vietnam

seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from Vietnam
seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Vietnam
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Australia
seen from Australia
seen from Japan
@maxadventurous
Nice moves, Mae
anyway i love girls 💋
I animated a fake theme song for my ridiculous bunny concept! Fuwa Fuwa Foof, a show about a sweet little bunny who used to be a vicious gang leader. Her old accomplices Giri Giri and Kiri Kiri constantly try to lure her back to a life of debauchery while Foof struggles to resist the good ol’ days of punching in some teeth. This is just for fun, it’s not a real show haha! Song is ‘Chu Chu Lovely’ by Maximum the Hormone
she’s a brick
If this were a cereal I’d call it DinoFloops.
But I'm scared of making garbage, like what if it turns into a monster, what if i cant write it, what if no garbage comes?
My buddy my pal we are all terrified. Making things is scary, and there’s nothing I can say that will help as much as showing your brain that the thing is not scary by doing the thing. If it turns into a monster, pick up your sword and run at it screaming. If no garbage comes, go out and chase it down. Do the thing.
Look at these images from Kiki’s Delivery Service for a sec. Both of them are perfect.
This one at the top is part of a storyboard, so it is rougher. It’s in pencils, there’s not a lot of detail, and obviously isn’t a finished frame like what’s below. (The second image also had an entire team working to make it). The thing is: the second image wouldn’t exist at all without the first one.
Now, obviously, an official storyboard that’s ready to go to frames isn’t stage one in creating something, it’s stage, like, five. Storyboards usually go through an uglier phase, when they’re still just getting the ideas figured out. Check out this piece of storyboard from Adventure Time.
Just take a minute and take it in. Bask in it. Look at his weird little mouth. This image is also perfect, because it’s not supposed to be pretty, it’s supposed to convey an idea, which it does. Pretty happens later.
My point is: You have plenty of time to turn whatever garbage you make into something beautiful and splendid. Masterpieces have started as napkin doodles. We all draw ugly things and write uninspired prose and sing off key. But you’re never going to draw well or write excellent words or sing off key if you don’t do the things.
The only way out is through, pal.
Be brave. You can do this. -Evvy
Locking Lips
Two snails are captured kissing while perched on top of cherry stems near Berdichev in Ukraine.
Photo by Vyacheslav Mishchenko
(via Photographer captures moment snail perches on Australian tree frog in Indonesia | Daily Mail Online)
Hacker Magnemite Appreciation!
I gotta admit, seeing Pokemon used for things other than battle is really neat
hes a little hacking drone. nice!
Today, let’s talk about LA FARFA MAGAZINE.
“We don’t promote losing weight or gaining weight, because there are women that look gorgeous regardless of what they weigh,” Kon, editor in chief of La Farfa magazine, tells The Japan Times. “Our view is that people should not be defined by the size of the clothes they wear.”
La Farfa magazine, believed to be the first one in Japan aimed at generously proportioned women, features models that weigh between 60 and 120 kg. A distinctive feature of the fashion magazine is that it provides the weight, the height and the body measurements of each model on the page since, according to Kon, “it is more convenient for the readers.”
The creation of the magazine stems from Kon’s own experience. She says regular fashion magazines featuring slim models were of no practical use to her, but she enjoyed checking the latest trends anyway.
Then came the recent expansion of overseas retail clothing companies in Japan — including H&M and Forever 21 — that allowed women to enjoy stylish clothing for a reasonable price, and in bigger sizes.
The media has also started to embrace plump female celebrities in the past few years, with comedians such as Naomi Watanabe and Kanako Yanagihara being popular. Terms such as puniko and pochako, which can be roughly translated to “squishy girl” and “pudgy girl,” have gained ground this year, with some mainstream fashion magazines such as CanCam publishing stories on the movement.
“There was demand for our kind of fashion magazine,” Kon says, as she gives her take on the trend. “Personally, I feel that men are looking at women differently than before.” She adds that while dating a slender woman was considered the ideal not too long ago, men now appear to be seeking partners who can provide iyashi (healing).
“There have also been changes in how women see men as well,” she continues, pointing out that the height, income and academic background of men may not be the prized qualities they were a decade ago.
Initially unable to find any agency with plump models, Kon says her team recruited candidates straight from the streets. Many of the fashion brands were also reluctant to provide sample clothing for La Farfa “since they couldn’t tell what our publication was going to look like at first.”
But that changed quickly after their inaugural issue in March sold out its 80,000 copies. La Farfa was first intended as a bi-annual publication, but the publishers quickly agreed to make it a bi-monthly instead.
La Farfa says it does not use digital methods to make its models look slimmer, but will take advantage of their body features to display the models’ “glamorous” side. Make-up pages are filled with advice for round-faced women, instead of teaching readers how to use cosmetics to look thinner.
“Initially, there was feedback from readers saying our models weren’t pretty, and that dressing them up doesn’t change the fact they are overweight,” Kon says. But she adds that responses from the readers have become more positive recently.
Kon is aware that losing weight remains a vexing issue for many people today. She is not critical of those trying to shed some pounds, but she has her own take on it.
“Whether you want to lose weight or not,” she says, “you must begin with accepting and being happy with who you are now.” She adds that trying to lose weight because you aren’t content with who you are “won’t change the situation.”
True to the spirit of La Farfa, Yaseru Festa isn’t out to pressure people into being thin, just to be happy and healthy, Kuraishi says.
“We just want people to find the best service or product that is suited to them.”
Source Japan times
Check the website of La farfa magazine: http://lafarfa.jp/