usefulartshitifoundon:

finkspiration:

unwrapping:

Tumblr Dashboard Image Display Sizes (Updated July 13, 2015):

  • Photo Post: 540 by 810 pixels for dashboard view. Use 1280 by 1920 pixels for high-res version (except for superwide panoramas).
  • “Tall” Photo Post: Tumblr takes a 300-by-810-pixel version of your image then stretches it by 80% using HTML height and width attributes to make it 540 by 1458 pixels. Image quality may be diminished. Aim for uploading at least 710-by-1920-pixel images in case Tumblr switches to a better image size on the Dashboard. (It’s happened before.)
  • Photoset: 540-pixel width for one image in a photoset row. 268-pixel width for two images in a photoset row. 177-pixel width for three images in a photoset row. Gutters are 4 pixels.
  • Audio Post: 169 by 169 pixels for album art.
  • Link Post: 130 by 130 pixels for the thumbnail image grabbed by Tumblr from web link (if available).
  • Text Post: As of March 30, 2015, inline images can appear full-width (540 pixels wide). Any inline images that are 300 pixels wide or larger will display as full-width.
  • Avatar: 64-by-64-pixel icon next to posts.

How to post art without tumblr making it look like a blurry mess.
I can’t believe this is a website made for posting images sometimes.

one of the most reblogged comics i’ve ever made is on my tumblr with half of it blurry as shit and the other half not so pay attention to this stuff :/

littleulvar:

I focus on the basic shapes first, and I find sharp lines best for this (don’t be afraid to exaggerate), like so:

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lucifer-is-a-bag-of-dicks:

kintatsujo:

mon-degreen:

So a lot of the time, when people think of heterochromia, they think of a person (or a non-human animal, etc.) with one blue eye and one brown eye, or maybe with fantasy eye colors like bright yellow and lime green.

While having a blue eye and a brown eye certainly does happen, it’s not the only type of heterochromia there is. As someone with heterochromia, I thought I’d explain how it works in real people. Of course, real irises aren’t flat colors, but this makes it easier to see the difference, and I don’t want to use real people’s pictures without their permission.

(Note: the iris colors in the first image were chosen to be accessible to the color blind and are not representative of actual human iris colors. The light blue color is the base color of the iris and the dark red-purple color is the heterochromia.)

Keep reading

Yuuuusss

I once knew a girl in primary school with three eye colours, she had one regular blue eye and a green eye with a freckly patch of brown taking up like a whole third of it (actually it might have been hazel?? I can’t remember)

I’d never noticed until we had to draw pictures of each other for class and it blew my mind

bludragongal:

askoursquad:

shatterstag:

bludragongal:

the-quick-one:

smachajewski:

cynellis:

bonkalore:

Trying to draw buildings

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yo here’s a useful tip from your fellow art ho cynellis… use google sketchup to create a model of the room/building/town you’re trying to draw… then take a screenshot & use it as a reference! It’s simple & fun!

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Sketchup is incredibly helpful. I can’t recommend it enough.

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There’s a 3D model warehouse where you can download all kinds of stuff so you don’t have to build everything from scratch.

reblog to save a life

This is an incomplete tutorial, and it drives me crazy every
time I see it come around.

We live in a pretty great digital age and we have access to
a ton of amazing tools that artists in past generations couldn’t even dream of,
but a lot of people look at a cool trick and only learn half of the process of
using it.

Here’s the missing part of this tutorial:

How do you populate your backgrounds?

Well, here’s the answer:

If the focus is the environment, you must show a person in relation to
that environment.

The examples above are great because they show how to use the
software itself, but each one just kind of “plops” the character in front of
their finished product with no regard of the person’s relation to their
environment.

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How do you fix this?

Well, here’s the simplest solution:

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This is a popular trick used by professional storyboard and
comic artists alike when they’re quickly planning compositions. It’s simple and
it requires you to do some planning before you sit down to crank out that
polished, final version of your work, but it will be the difference between a background
and an environment.

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From Blacksad
(artist: Juanjo Guarnido)

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From Hellboy (Mike
Mignola)

Even if your draftsmanship isn’t that great (like mine),
people can be more immersed in the story you tell if you just make it feel like
there is a world that exists completely separate from the one in which they
currently reside – not just making a backdrop the characters stand in front of.

Your creations live in a unique world, and it is as much a character as
any other member of the cast. Make it as believable as they are.

Great comments and tutorials!

I’m a 3d artist and have been exploring the possibilities of using 3d as reference for 2d poses. I want to add a couple of tips and things!

Sketchup is very useful for environment references, and I assume it’s reasonably easy to learn. If you’re interested in going above and beyond, I highly recommend learning a proper 3d modeling program to help with art, especially because you can very easily populate a scene or location with characters!

Using 3ds Max I can pretty quickly construct an environment for reference. But going beyond that, I can also pose a pretty simple ‘CAT’ armature (known in 3d as a rig) straight into the scene, which can be totally customized, from various limbs, tails, wings, whatever, to proportions, and also can be modeled onto and expanded upon (for an example, you could 3d sculpt a head reference for your character and then attach it to the CAT rig, so you have a reference for complex face angles!)

The armature can also be posed incredibly easily. I know programs exist for stuff like this – Manga Studio, Design Doll – but posing characters in these programs is always an exercise in frustration and very fiddly imo. A simple 3d rig is impossibly easy to pose.

By creating an environment and dropping my character rig into it, I have an excellent point of reference when it comes to drawing the scene!

Not only that, but I can also view the scene from whatever angle I could ever want or need, including the character and their pose/position relative to the environment.

We can even quickly and easily expand this scene to include more characters!

Proper 3d modeling software is immensely powerful, and if you wanted to, you could model a complex environment that occurs regularly in your comic or illustration work (say, a castle interior, or an outdoor forest environment) and populate the scene with as many perspective-grounded characters as you need!

reblogging to save a life

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Look at this amazing addition! This is fantastic!

Reasons my new physics prof is adorable

kaijuno:

kaijuno:

kaijuno:

kaijuno:

– on the first day of class he brought his favorite toy truck from when he was a child
– is from Argentina and has a cute accent and sometimes speaks in Spanish on accident
– teaches us Spanish phrases for fun
– very tall and awkward and has super curly hair that falls into his face constantly
– giggles at his own jokes
– on the second day of class he showed us pictures of his cat eating a salami
– the cat’s name is Pants

– i saw his teaching notes today and he doodles little flowers in the margins of his notebook

– Brought us a smiley face balloon to cheer us up when the weather was bad

– played with legos for half the class

chuwenjie:

A compilation of stuff I know about drawing Asian faces and Asian culture! I feel like many “How-To-Draw” tutorials often default to European faces and are not really helpful when drawing people of other races. So I thought I’d put this together in case anyone is interested! Feel free to share this guide and shoot me questions if you have any! I’m by no means an expert, I just know a few things from drawing experience and from my own cultural background. 

I’ve been having lots of trouble with drawings hands, and looking around I only see people drawing the side of hands with the thumb and all I’m looking for is just one simple reference of the pinky side of a fist facing up ;;

kelpls:

omigod i drew a reply to this and somehow in my head I remembered it as an ask about fists but it wasn’t?????????? I WENT COMPLETELY OFF THE SUBJECT and to goodness knows where

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SORRY FOR GOING OFF TOPIC i hope the last pic helps w what you were looking for? OH GOSH