Ash. 28. trans autistic dude. He/Him or They/Them. Irish and Jewish. I love space, storytelling, and commiting afronts to nature in the laboratory. I now have a fic-writing and fandom infodump sideblog.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Note
Remember when you'd turn on the radio and almost always Poker Face was playing
Back when God was still listening
95K notes
·
View notes
Text
situation dire. i've been saying 'huzzah', 'alas', and 'tis unironically for like a year now. harmless so far.
however. i hath noticed i now mark half of my goodbyes with 'i must away'. it's spreading
58K notes
·
View notes
Text
Something I try to keep in mind when making art that looks vintage is keeping a limited color pallette. Digital art gives you a very wide, Crisp scope of colors, whereas traditional art-- especially older traditional art-- had a very limited and sometimes dulled use of color.
This is a modern riso ink swatch, but still you find a similar and limited selection of colors to mix with. (Mixing digitally as to emulate the layering of ink riso would be coloring on Multiply, and layering on top of eachother 👉)
If you find some old prints, take a closer look and see if you can tell what colors they used and which ones they layered... a lot of the time you'll find yellow as a base!

Misprints can really reveal what colors were used and where, I love misprints...
Something else I keep in the back of my mind is: how the human eye perceives color on paper vs. a screen. Ink and paint soaks into paper, it bleeds, stains, fades over time, smears, ect... the history of a piece can show in physical wear. What kind of history do you want to emulate? Misprinted? Stained? Kept as clean as possible, but unable to escape the bluing damages of the sun? It's one of my favorite things about making vintage art. Making it imperfect!
You can see the bleed, the wobble of the lines on the rug, the fading, the dirt... beautiful!!
Thinking in terms of traditional-method art while drawing digital can help open avenues to achieving that genuine, vintage look!


68K notes
·
View notes
Text
Mozilla, in its finite wisdom, embedded LLM bots into recent versions of Firefox for the vitally-important purpose of… naming tab groups. Now, some users are noticing CPU and power usage spikes caused by a background process called Inference.
Ugh. Reminder again for Firefox users to visit your about:config page, search for the browser.ml.chat.enabled key, and set that to false:
If yours says true then double-click it until it reads false.
Doing that turns off the AI chatbot features in Firefox, but also the stupid new LLM tab-naming feature that's rolling out.
81K notes
·
View notes
Text
Bovine figure of the day: Toymany Bison
390 notes
·
View notes
Text




the children yearn for Casper fanart
105 notes
·
View notes
Text
Yup returning to necromancy, I’m so back. And you’re so back, and you’re so back, and you’re so back, and you’re
73K notes
·
View notes
Text
Diversity win! Ancestral curse recognises non-biological parenthood!
81K notes
·
View notes
Text

God gives his hardest battles (taking decent pet pictures) to his bravest soldiers (people with black cats)
25K notes
·
View notes
Text
congratulations to the straw hats for adopting their first adult!
30K notes
·
View notes