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#photographers on deviantart
waldgeister · 10 months
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"It's the moon that moves me. The sunlight makes everything so obvious." - German North - July 2k23
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robinsnest2111 · 4 months
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whenever I see early to mid 2000s japanese street/harajuku fashion, my inner preteen is rattling the bars of its cage, BEGGING me to dress my current self in old school gothic lolita/visual kei/egl/ega outfits and tease the shit out of my hair and put on the messiest most elaborate make up and have the best time of my life
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cuntstable · 9 months
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ooohhhh my god just realized that so many children on social media are gonna use ai art to make stuff they think is cool (fine) and then theyre gonna go UM yeah…. I drew this with paint ☺️LOL
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samurairobotics · 1 year
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lostdeviantartfilm · 4 months
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Prepare to evacuate soul in 3, 2, 1
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xlntwtch2 · 5 months
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photo by @xlntwtch2 november 2023
art by someone (do you know who?) years ago on dA
"i like the sailboat one, she said"
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etsyrippleffects · 1 year
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Jupiter
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xlucidosomnium · 1 year
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Also posted here.
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auxiliarydetective · 2 years
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So, remember when I rambled about Vicky’s faceclaim was Marilyn Monroe? Well... Get ready for part 2 - sort of.
Raevyn’s faceclaim is Nicoleta Toderici
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Those EYES! And the freckles!!!
Her hair would definitely be wilder and curlier, but this is a pretty accurate depiction of what Raevyn would look like - with glowy cyan eyes!
Artbreeder edit and artwork for comparison:
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desertmarauder · 6 days
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Where to find me online:
Instagram
Flickr
Deviantart
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waldgeister · 1 year
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St. Moritz Dreams - Switzerland - July 2k19 https://www.deviantart.com/1darkstar1
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ms-demeanor · 5 months
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Why reblog machine-generated art?
When I was ten years old I took a photography class where we developed black and white photos by projecting light on papers bathed in chemicals. If we wanted to change something in the image, we had to go through a gradual, arduous process called dodging and burning.
When I was fifteen years old I used photoshop for the first time, and I remember clicking on the clone tool or the blur tool and feeling like I was cheating.
When I was twenty eight I got my first smartphone. The phone could edit photos. A few taps with my thumb were enough to apply filters and change contrast and even spot correct. I was holding in my hand something more powerful than the huge light machines I'd first used to edit images.
When I was thirty six, just a few weeks ago, I took a photo class that used Lightroom Classic and again, it felt like cheating. It made me really understand how much the color profiles of popular web images I'd been seeing for years had been pumped and tweaked and layered with local edits to make something that, to my eyes, didn't much resemble photography. To me, photography is light on paper. It's what you capture in the lens. It's not automatic skin smoothing and a local filter to boost the sky. This reminded me a lot more of the photomanipulations my friend used to make on deviantart; layered things with unnatural colors that put wings on buildings or turned an eye into a swimming pool. It didn't remake the images to that extent, obviously, but it tipped into the uncanny valley. More real than real, more saturated more sharp and more present than the actual world my lens saw. And that was before I found the AI assisted filters and the tool that would identify the whole sky for you, picking pieces of it out from between leaves.
You know, it's funny, when people talk about artists who might lose their jobs to AI they don't talk about the people who have already had to move on from their photo editing work because of technology. You used to be able to get paid for basic photo manipulation, you know? If you were quick with a lasso or skilled with masks you could get a pretty decent chunk of change by pulling subjects out of backgrounds for family holiday cards or isolating the pies on the menu for a mom and pop. Not a lot, but enough to help. But, of course, you can just do that on your phone now. There's no need to pay a human for it, even if they might do a better job or be more considerate toward the aesthetic of an image.
And they certainly don't talk about all the development labs that went away, or the way that you could have trained to be a studio photographer if you wanted to take good photos of your family to hang on the walls and that digital photography allowed in a parade of amateurs who can make dozens of iterations of the same bad photo until they hit on a good one by sheer volume and luck; if you want to be a good photographer everyone can do that why didn't you train for it and spend a long time taking photos on film and being okay with bad photography don't you know that digital photography drove thousands of people out of their jobs.
My dad told me that he plays with AI the other day. He hosts a movie podcast and he puts up thumbnails for the downloads. In the past, he'd just take a screengrab from the film. Now he tells the Bing AI to make him little vignettes. A cowboy running away from a rhino, a dragon arm-wrestling a teddy bear. That kind of thing. Usually based on a joke that was made on the show, or about the subject of the film and an interest of the guest.
People talk about "well AI art doesn't allow people to create things, people were already able to create things, if they wanted to create things they should learn to create things." Not everyone wants to make good art that's creative. Even fewer people want to put the effort into making bad art for something that they aren't passionate about. Some people want filler to go on the cover of their youtube video. My dad isn't going to learn to draw, and as the person who he used to ask to photoshop him as Ant-Man because he certainly couldn't pay anyone for that kind of thing, I think this is a great use case for AI art. This senior citizen isn't going to start cartooning and at two recordings a week with a one-day editing turnaround he doesn't even really have the time for something like a Fiverr commission. This is a great use of AI art, actually.
I also know an artist who is going Hog Fucking Wild creating AI art of their blorbos. They're genuinely an incredibly talented artist who happens to want to see their niche interest represented visually without having to draw it all themself. They're posting the funny and good results to a small circle of mutuals on socials with clear information about the source of the images; they aren't trying to sell any of the images, they're basically using them as inserts for custom memes. Who is harmed by this person saying "i would like to see my blorbo lasciviously eating an ice cream cone in the is this a pigeon meme"?
The way I use machine-generated art, as an artist, is to proof things. Can I get an explosion to look like this. What would a wall of dead computer monitors look like. Would a ballerina leaping over the grand canyon look cool? Sometimes I use AI art to generate copyright free objects that I can snip for a collage. A lot of the time I use it to generate ideas. I start naming random things and seeing what it shows me and I start getting inspired. I can ask CrAIon for pose reference, I can ask it to show me the interior of spaces from a specific angle.
I profoundly dislike the antipathy that tumblr has for AI art. I understand if people don't want their art used in training pools. I understand if people don't want AI trained on their art to mimic their style. You should absolutely use those tools that poison datasets if you don't want your art included in AI training. I think that's an incredibly appropriate action to take as an artist who doesn't want AI learning from your work.
However I'm pretty fucking aggressively opposed to copyright and most of the "solid" arguments against AI art come down to "the AIs viewed and learned from people's copyrighted artwork and therefore AI is theft rather than fair use" and that's a losing argument for me. In. Like. A lot of ways. Primarily because it is saying that not only is copying someone's art theft, it is saying that looking at and learning from someone's art can be defined as theft rather than fair use.
Also because it's just patently untrue.
But that doesn't really answer your question. Why reblog machine-generated art? Because I liked that piece of art.
It was made by a machine that had looked at billions of images - some copyrighted, some not, some new, some old, some interesting, many boring - and guided by a human and I liked it. It was pretty. It communicated something to me. I looked at an image a machine made - an artificial picture, a total construct, something with no intrinsic meaning - and I felt a sense of quiet and loss and nostalgia. I looked at a collection of automatically arranged pixels and tasted salt and smelled the humidity in the air.
I liked it.
I don't think that all AI art is ugly. I don't think that AI art is all soulless (i actually think that 'having soul' is a bizarre descriptor for art and that lacking soul is an equally bizarre criticism). I don't think that AI art is bad for artists. I think the problem that people have with AI art is capitalism and I don't think that's a problem that can really be laid at the feet of people curating an aesthetic AI art blog on tumblr.
Machine learning isn't the fucking problem the problem is massive corporations have been trying hard not to pay artists for as long as massive corporations have existed (isn't that a b-plot in the shape of water? the neighbor who draws ads gets pushed out of his job by product photography? did you know that as recently as ten years ago NewEgg had in-house photographers who would take pictures of the products so users wouldn't have to rely on the manufacturer photos? I want you to guess what killed that job and I'll give you a hint: it wasn't AI)
Am I putting a human out of a job because I reblogged an AI-generated "photo" of curtains waving in the pale green waters of an imaginary beach? Who would have taken this photo of a place that doesn't exist? Who would have painted this hypersurrealistic image? What meaning would it have had if they had painted it or would it have just been for the aesthetic? Would someone have paid for it or would it be like so many of the things that artists on this site have spent dozens of hours on only to get no attention or value for their work?
My worst ratio of hours to notes is an 8-page hand-drawn detailed ink comic about getting assaulted at a concert and the complicated feelings that evoked that took me weeks of daily drawing after work with something like 54 notes after 8 years; should I be offended if something generated from a prompt has more notes than me? What does that actually get the blogger? Clout? I believe someone said that popularity on tumblr gets you one thing and that is yelled at.
What do you get out of this? Are you helping artists right now? You're helping me, and I'm an artist. I've wanted to unload this opinion for a while because I'm sick of the argument that all Real Artists think AI is bullshit. I'm a Real Artist. I've been paid for Real Art. I've been commissioned as an artist.
And I find a hell of a lot of AI art a lot more interesting than I find human-generated corporate art or Thomas Kincaid (but then, I repeat myself).
There are plenty of people who don't like AI art and don't want to interact with it. I am not one of those people. I thought the gay sex cats were funny and looked good and that shitposting is the ideal use of a machine image generation: to make uncopyrightable images to laugh at.
I think that tumblr has decided to take a principled stand against something that most people making the argument don't understand. I think tumblr's loathing for AI has, generally speaking, thrown weight behind a bunch of ideas that I think are going to be incredibly harmful *to artists specifically* in the long run.
Anyway. If you hate AI art and you don't want to interact with people who interact with it, block me.
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Let's keep things simple, shall we?
My name is Carmela, and I'm many things. A crochetier, an aspiring writer, a growing artist (both traditional and digital), a cellphone photographer still trying to learn, and a 7th-grader in a vocational high school centered around fisheries. Fun, if I do say so myself.
I started this blog in the hopes to find and grow an audience, one that will give me the motivation to keep doing what I love. I also wanted to share things I love, things I find interesting, and whatnot.
Some things to note about me: I'm a bit... concerning at times, like, mentally concerning, and if you see me be so on any of my platforms, link to me the 7 Cups website. It's likely I'm going through another episode.
Anyways, I'll be posting longer posts, art WIPs, and photographs here, as well as oneshot snippets from my oneshot compilation in Wattpad. Shorter posts like random thoughts and phrases can be found on my Twitter. Completed art will be on my DeviantArt. Some random videos can be found on YouTube. Hope you enjoy!
-Carmela
PS.: My favorite color is blue. And here are the usernames and tags of my aforementioned socials:
Carmela's Random Stuff (@Randomela)
Carmela Reyes (@UselessCarmela)
BlueCaramela (caramelatte)
Carmela Reyes (@caramela_reyes)
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drill-teeth-art · 7 months
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Actually, here’s a piece of artistic advice. Having a tummy. A soft stomach. Having that is really not an exclusively fat body trait. And most body types are just going to have a some fat on their stomach and have a tummy. This is completely normal and common and healthy. And yes I’m absolutely fed up of seeing people drawing bodies completely devoid of fat and soft muscle as much as they can be, so I think more people should get comfortable with depicting body fat. Small and even skinnier body type does not mean no fat. Stop being scared of drawing fat at all. Get comfy with it.
I will even provide some tips.
Here’s a decent starting point for references of some bodies you may be unfamiliar with depicting. There’s just a lot of pictures this photographer takes of various models in different poses that you could benefit from working with.
For drawing body fat try to avoid using perfect circles. It gives the fat an almost stiff and stretched look and it’s not great. Consider gravity and use more sagging shapes. They’re going to be more rounded triangle shapes than circles, honestly.
Draw in a coffee shop or library sometime and just let yourself look at other people around you as you do. You don’t have to draw them if you don’t want to. It’s just good experience as an artist to let yourself be inspired by being around what you hope to portray well.
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ssavaart · 4 months
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Happy Wednesday All!
Page 07 of my Hair Journal Series was my favorite. The Transgender painting. Everything about it just clicked.
The photo reference was found on Deviant Art. It was such a lovely photo that I reached out to the photographer and asked for permission to use it (they said yes).
I think the photo reference was truly why this is my favorite. Finding the right photo or model elevates your art in SO many ways.
While painting this live on Youtube, I was subconsciously referring to the subject as "they/them" and at some point decided they were going to be Transgender.
One of the people on the live suggested a trans flag tattoo and... that's how this piece came together.
Sending Big Hugs from the Hobbit Hole. ♥♥♥
Scott
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etsyrippleffects · 2 years
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Lavender Syrup DeviantArt | Etsy Shop
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