Welcome to my page. I'm a teenager from Russia. Me loves many stuff related to art, so be ready for such content as DIY WIPs, drawings, writings and comics. And yes! Dragons!
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text



☆Task!☆
We suggest you create your own zone in the world of make belive, similar to the Lake of Tears, the Plain of Hesitation, the Sands of Regret, etc.
All these places have unusually strange properties, suitable for their name, which you may have noticed while reading the comic
12 notes
·
View notes
Text


refseek.com

www.worldcat.org/

link.springer.com

http://bioline.org.br/

repec.org

science.gov

pdfdrive.com
345K notes
·
View notes
Photo








Hiroshi Yoshida - Color woodblock prints from the series United States of America.
78K notes
·
View notes
Text

Reblog to pelt your mutuals with notifications
2K notes
·
View notes
Text






“Shadow and light are the most stable and perfect tools of creation: they unite colors, shapes, and dimensions,” says Moldovan artist Sergiu Ciochină, adding that “shadows move us through diversity, enhancing our perception, while light fills us with the joy of discovery.” In saturated hues, he captures dappled sunlight as it filters through the trees and the rich tones of the golden hour as it casts deep bluish-purple shade onto the sides of houses.
Taking cues from the Impressionists, Ciochină focuses on the nuances of light and its ability to reveal outlines and forms. He works in thick, impasto oil paint on board, emphasizing the shapes of windows, doors, and stoops and transforming otherwise ordinary buildings into compositions glowing with the patterns of foliage, architectural angles, and the texture of brushstrokes. “The symbiosis I create between nature and architecture is intended to evoke a love for space,” he says.
on Sergiu Ciochină
10K notes
·
View notes
Text
Dark eyes meet under the sky The stars are out, we're alive in the night
Absolutely nothing to see here. Just a dad waiting for his kids to show up so they can go on a little hunt together.
8K notes
·
View notes
Text
5K notes
·
View notes
Text

Since it's watermelon season!
My grandfather used to grow watermelons, among other things, and he told me about most of this, especially the orange spot. Those are the absolute best!
83K notes
·
View notes
Text
Write it shitty, write it scared, write it without a clue but don't you be so spineless and have an AI write fanfic for you.
98K notes
·
View notes
Text
A cyanometer is a device used to measure the intensity of blue in the sky, often used in meteorology and atmospheric studies. It typically consists of a series of blue color patches or a color gradient, allowing the user to compare the sky’s color to these reference colors.
72K notes
·
View notes
Text
Note - We’ve updated this post with more tools and clarifications!
Every day, there seem to be more reasons to break up with Google.
So we’ve rounded up a bunch of privacy-centric alternatives for all your deGoogling needs.
Check out the full list over on the blog!
- The Ellipsus Team xo
52K notes
·
View notes
Text
hey if you're the type of writer that's like me where you tend to write specific scenes first that vaguely weave together into a plot, you might like using obsidian as a writing app.
my frustration with other writing applications is that i will write my scenes out of order and it's hard to move things around and rearrange them on a regular document.
but with obsidian there's this canvas feature where you can just write all your scenes and plot moments on these little cards that you can freely rearrange. you can color code them and connect them too.
here's the canvas i've created for my current multi-chapter fic: (if you zoom in you can see all the text in each card this what it looks like zoomed out)
as you can see, i color code them based off chapters and will group them next to a document card with the working title of the chapter. anything not color-coded are scenes that don't have a proper place quite yet or it's just world building references. this app can also be good for note-taking and collecting research!
best of all, it's FREE!!! the only downside is that if you want your stuff to sync across devices, you do have to pay for that. i constantly hop between my laptop and desktop so i pay for the syncing. but if you write on only one device it's completely free! EDIT: some reblogs have mentioned that you can apparently link your own personal cloud storage (dropbox, gdrive, icloud, etc.) to obsidian for free! that way you can access your obsidian vaults across multiple devices without the extra fee. i don't mind supporting the devs but just something to look into if costs is a concern.
i typically use it for organizing my thoughts for a first draft. once i get all the scenes arranged and mostly written out, i will copy and paste them into ellipsus (also free & highly recommended as a google doc alternative) so that they're all in one document that i can edit.
7K notes
·
View notes
Text
youtube
1 note
·
View note