So so true 💯
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Today's Document
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@thesabbit
So so true 💯
one way to combat this is to be confidently proactive and no-shame reactive. they're still little enough that they think the world of you as a parent or an adult. the key is being casual instead of shocked and upset.
"oh, i don't think that's just for girls. it's pink, but anybody can like pink."
"oh yeah, purple is a great color! colors are for everybody."
"you're right-- i am a girl. that means i have a strong body just like a boy, and i can [climb/use a drill/take out the trash] with my arms."
"hm i don't think we're letting private parts make a decision about this toy."
"if other kids give you a hard time, you can just say you like this toy (or this color) and that's why. if anyone is rude to you, it might hurt, but they're the ones being wrong."
"i think it's cool that we both have eyes that can cry if we're feeling overwhelmed or sad. it helps us communicate how we feel."
"some kids might tell you this is for girls, but it's really just for people. we can have fun and play with anything safe that's interesting. it's sad that some kids don't have adults that teach them that."
"it's important to play and learn all kinds of skills. what if you find out you like to cook? what if someday you have a friend who needs help?"
"you know who buys the MOST glitter? people who make paint for boats. guys who go fishing spend more time with glitter than anyone else."
"it's divided into girls and boys because some grownups maybe care more than they should about colors. but that's not a real rule."
like. you gotta prepare them to stand up for themselves and you gotta normalize *recognizing* and dismissing those comments, or they WILL start to win out. walk your toddler sons or nephews down all the toy aisles. let them hold a baby doll. take your girls through the hot wheels and nerf sections.
and don't make the mistake of swinging to the other extreme. trying to talk a four year old boy into the pink version, or trying to talk a four year old girl out of wanting a frilly dress are JUST as gendering. you're sending signals that they should ignore their own preferences to appease an adult's preferred worldview, and they're going to equally cave when it's in support of an ideology you don't like. let them gravitate toward what they like and give them the language to recognize it as personal preference-- to identify and disregard comments, or defend others-- even if their preference is 100% mainstream.
the goal isn't to make sure little boys have pink toys and play house, or that little girls get construction tools and wear blue.
the secondary goal is to strip away the gender-signaling in toys and prepare kids to stand up for OTHER HUMANS.
the primary goal is to equip kids to play and wear what they like without shame or fear.
and it's so fucking sad it starts so early, but it can work both ways-- you can have kids going home from the same daycare suddenly equipped by peers to say, NO I DO WANT THE TOOLBOX FOR MY BIRTHDAY, NOAH SAYS HIS MOM FIXES EVERYTHING IN HER HOUSE and I LIKE THE ONE WITH FLOWERS, SOPHIE SAYS HER DAD LOVES FLOWERS.
maybe this means liam in kindergarten spends most of his playtime with baby dolls and glitter stickers. or maybe it means liam plays with monster trucks and wears red shirts with basketballs, but will tell a peer, "oh it's cool that you like pink. is that your favorite color? i like red but pink icing is my favorite on cake." and it's because a beloved uncle or big brother or parent said, "oh strawberry icing is MY favorite, too! i always want pink icing on my cake. the cake doesn't care if i'm a boy or a girl."
or maybe liam had an experience like my five year old, where he was going across a construction store parking lot in his bright pink crocs and a man tumbled out of his SUV fifty feet away to stick a leg in the air and yell, "HEY, WE BOTH HAVE PINK CROCS!" just to be nice. because pink is for humans.
tl;dr -- i get the grief here. i've felt it, too. but the way we change this isn't with shock or dread. it's with intention and grace and being involved. in modeling conversation and comments without spite or criticism.
Black cats are lucky. (via leahweissmuller)
MAN [IN THICK ACCENT]: Black cat bring good luck. Not bad luck. I have black cat - See, him face - And I am not dead today: Good luck!
“See him face”
I sure fucking do see him face
Him face
Reblog him face for good luck in 2021
Reblog him face for good luck in 2021 (2)
Reblog him face for good luck in 2022
Reblog him face for good luck in 2023
Reblog him face for good luck in 2024
Reblog him face for good luck in 2025
i fucking love tumblr on new years i scroll past a glittertext gif wishing me a happy 2002 i scroll past my mutual wishing me a happy 2018 i scroll past a gifset wishing me a happy 2013 i scroll p
happy 1915 everyone!
"Does the author respect women" is a third distinct question from either of the other two.
It's completely irrelevant. What does the author's personal life / sex / gender / political or religious opinions / social behaviour have to do with the story? Probably not much - that's why they're writing fiction. Can we come back to ignoring authors and celebs personal life? They're people, faulty like everybody else.
Death of the author is one way to analyze literature. It's not the ONLY relevant way to do so. Sometimes broad knowledge of authorial context -does- matter to a story. The Chronicles of Narnia read differently depending on the reader's knowledge of C.S. Lewis' particular brand of Christianity, for example. This isn't a post about cancel culture; we are still talking about the work and the context in which it was made.
I'm a firm believer in 'once you post it, you have set it free into the world and can't control how people interpret it', but that doesn't mean knowing an author's beliefs isn't useful for analysis. The author's beliefs and biases are going to find their way into the story, and the unintentional ones are, I think, even more important than the intentional ones--because if you aren't aware of a bigoted author's bigotry, and aren't bigoted in that way yourself, massive Weirdness in characterisation is just confusing.
Examples? Okay....
My mom and I both found Harry Potter to have a lot of meaning and impact on us as a piece of art, and we also bond over it, as one of the few things we can bond over. My mom being a reader, and fond of mysteries, she picked up the first of JKR's adult mystery series, and read it, and there were things about it that... hit wrong, in a way she couldn't name. Then, the whole terf thing came to light, and my mom suddenly understood what it was that had seemed weird about the characterisations, about the choices that had made no sense to her. If she had never found out about the author's views, she wouldn't have been able to learn what those views translate into in art, and that's an important thing to learn.
Another example is Rudyard Kipling, Frances Hodgeson Burnett, and anti-Indian racism and Indian Orientalism in 19th century British literature. I grew up on the Jungle Books, Just So Stories, The Secret Garden, and A Little Princess--all of which are books by authors with varying degrees of colonialist and racist attitudes toward Indians and India. When I was younger, and didn't know about that, I inadvertently copied those views and put them in my own writing. I did not know I was doing that, because I did not know they were there, because I lacked any sort of first-hand experience, as I am not Indian myself. Once I grew up a bit more, and learned more of the nuances of 19th century attitudes and about those specific authors' other writings and opinions, I realised what had happened, and became able to separate out those tropes from those works, so I was able to avoid parroting them. If I'd never learned anything about those authors, I would have perpetuated more harm.
Sometimes, NOT knowing is a blessing--I read CS Lewis' Narnia series in its entirety as a very small child who had been entirely shielded from Christianity and so didn't pick up on those tones. This meant I could enjoy the books a lot more as pure fantasy. Now that I know, I can't read them again, because the allegory ruins the fantasy for me. So it's a double-edged sword, true, but at the same time--if I hadn't learned, I may have perpetuated those harmful ideas without realising that's what I was doing, and that's worse.
Or how about watching something: Recently, I watched the Dr Who episode "Boom", which was written by Stephen Moffat. Now, what I know about Stephen Moffat is that he is misogynist, and generally a mean-spirited person. If I hadn't known that, it would have been incomprehensible, some of the ways this story was bad; but knowing he's a sexist and overall rather mean person made clear why and where the story failed, and why for example the women characters acted so... well, to a non-bigoted point of view, so strange.
Sometimes you can't figure out what's off, sometimes you're too young, or sometimes you're so far away from that belief. It's not that you must know an author's personal life--the examples I quoted are all to do with an author's opinions which they have willingly stated in essays or other of their writings, or have to do with the time and place which they live or lived. This is not private stuff.
Because yeah, I am with you on "the private lives of other people are not our right or business to know"! I am I would say even more radical about that than a lot of folks. I aggressively do not gossip about the news on this court trial or that allegation or alleged crime. Because I learned from Horace Rumpole that Presumed Innocence is the golden thread which runs through a Just civilisation. We must presume innocence. We must stop oppression of the son-of-a-bitch because oppression is first aimed at sons-of-bitches, and it must be stopped at the beginning if it is to be stopped at all; but, an artist stating their opinions by writing essays, poems, or posts on public forums (such as twitter, facebook, tumblr, etc) is not their private life--in that case, they have chosen to tell us their opinions, and so it is not invasive to know them or talk about them.
@chosenofyffre these tags are too good to leave as tags:
I'm sure someone has mentioned Marion Zimmer Bradley and the Mists of Avalon series, but the first time I read it I didn't know anything about her, and I was so moved by the depth of suffering described, and also the depth of love and growth. And then I found out she and her husband sexually abused children including their own daughter and suddenly it changed my mind map. Was she making fun of the characters that made me cry? Was she using how far these characters went in their lives to justify their suffering? Is that what she thought she was doing? It made me too sick to finish a reread.
i’m gonna make it through this year if it kills me
I don't come on much anymore, but my very dear friend Rose is trying to get their power back on. They need about $500 for the overdue bill, hopefully before the food in the fridge goes bad. Then after that, trying to put a little money together to get back to the east coast where their family is. Right now they have no power, no phone service, no transportation, and no way to keep their hedgehogs at a safe temperature. They have a neighbor's wifi, but can't make calls. Ive known this person offline since we were kids in school together and I lived with their family for a few years. This is their real situation at this moment.
Anything anyone at all can spare on cash app to $sararosehunter will literally be keeping their little family alive and safe and be a step toward getting them to more permanent shelter.
I need a source of income so I can afford childcare so I can get a source of income
Reblog to give mutuals a break from whatever they're been going through
卓越したボディコントロール Σ(゚Д゚) スッゲ! Body control of a horse archer
( Reddit:r/Damnthatsinteresting u/rgatoNacho )
people really believe this? that's obviously a human archer
@identifying-horses-in-posts
what do you think
Trampoline
That's obviously a pigeon
memes by @dionysiandevotee
req'd by @ludmithjacques
fun fact instead of managing to find the og post i managed to find a SCREENSHOT first. misspelled it on my end too smh
text: Shrokovam's Gunblade
Did you say every episode of Good Omens Season 2? Because I heard Good Omens Season 2
Casting a spell on you that makes you happy, by the way. Your day tomorrow will be pretty good. Something nice will happen, maybe.
went from “KITTY” to “That is a grown ass man.” real quick.
reblog to give the person you reblogged this from a fucking break
Bacchante by Frederic Leighton (1892)
i hate that every time i look for color studies and tips to improve my art and make it more dynamic and interesting all that comes up are rudimentary explanations of the color wheel that explain it to me like im in 1st grade and just now discovering my primary colors
“red and green are opposites 🥰” cool now how do i paint a tree with pinks and blues without it looking like a child’s finger painting or incongruous blobs of rainbow vomit
ok i can’t explain it very well but im looking for tips and techniques for rendering art like
with specifically the highlights and colors being hues that compliment each other, don’t distract from the scene, and make it more interesting/visually appealing
is it too much to ask
gonna drop some sources I have saved on Pinterest! I don't know if these all link back to the original sources so apologies for that
cohesive but still contrasting
This kind of talks about color and composition
This is a bit about landscape specifically
Values & composition
Contrast in composition
Balance in colors & values
This one's more for palette building but I think it's useful and can be applied to the other ones
Cohesion within compositions/lighting
"Chromatic fringe" - I also see people using this with shading, they bring in a transition color that is a different hue than the base color or shadow, it makes it so that less vibrancy is lost and it doesn't get muddy!
This one specifically has a lot of process behind the style of painting you're looking for!
Also one of my favorite artists who makes bright and colorful art like this is Not Sorry Art on TikTok & YouTube, her website is here and it's<3 my fav. She has some videos where you can see her process
With the oranges painting you put as an example, I noticed they painted the lighter values more toward yellow - they also exaggerated the hues of the undertones of the photo, so I'm guessing they either did it in their head or bumped the saturation up to get a closer look! I really love these paintings you shared and I definitely share your desire to paint/draw like that :)
thanks this is super helpful! /gen
If you'd like 2 Print books that I absolutely reccomend to every visual artist regardless of Media, Color and Light and Imaginative Realism by James Gurney are basically religious texts for artists, even the 3-D people because his understanding and explanation of how light and form work is that damn good.
If you're wondering about Mr. Gurney's chops:
James Gurney is the Dinotopia Guy (that link includes his Dinotopia books, prints and online classes too)