By ぢゅのねことしあわせ
occasionally subtle
Stranger Things
noise dept.

tannertan36
Cosimo Galluzzi
styofa doing anything
Misplaced Lens Cap
d e v o n

JBB: An Artblog!
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
Monterey Bay Aquarium
dirt enthusiast
todays bird
trying on a metaphor

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

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will byers stan first human second

JVL

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@pocket-sized-angel
By ぢゅのねことしあわせ
I love the tone of voice this was written in
Princess Mononoke (1997) dir. Hayao Miyazaki
Saiid Kobeisy spring 2020 couture
bisexuality is not trans-exclusionary tell ur friends
“why are u so shy?” relax i just met you 2 years ago
I love Poppy’s new dress!
Planting trees on the medians of US Interstates would soak up 10.8 billion pounds of CO2 every year. No where near enough, but it’s a start.
tootymcnooty
The stylized background work of 101 Dalmatians, under Ken Anderson’s direction
Paula Sigman: Ken Anderson in 101 Dalmatians brought a whole different look… very angular and abstract. It’s very modern in its look.
Ken Anderson: It was the first use of Xerox line on any kind of a feature picture, and I personally loved the idea of seeing an animation drawing in Xerox, so then I tried to make it one world by doing the same thing with the backgrounds.
Brad Bird: And a guy named Ernie Nordli went over the backgrounds and made perfect symmetrical things a little asymmetrical and fattened some things up and gave it a little more of a caricatured quality. It’s a subtle effect. His drawings were then Xeroxed and placed over the background painting to bring it all together and make it all feel like it all had the same graphic quality as the foreground characters.
Brad Bird: There’s something very sophisticated about using the impression of a shape to be where your color is defined. While it looks simpler, it’s actually very hard to do well. And Walt Peregoy had a real knack for that, and I think Ken Anderson recognized that in Peregoy and let him go to town.
Floyd Norman: And I think what Ken Anderson, Walt Peregoy gave us with Dalmatians really fit that story, and I think it’s a great-looking film. Then we find out that much to our surprise that Walt was not all that pleased with it. And poor Ken Anderson, boy, he really suffered for that film because I think having Walt being displeased with your work is probably the worst thing that could happen to any Disney artist.