Favourite vegetable?? Pls vote. trying to prove smth!!
1105 votes • Poll ends in 5 days 9 hours
🥕 carrotjesus Follow
OP clearly yuor followers are biased. Carrots are objectively better than broccoli of all things and i think it's problematic that you called carrots stinky it's really manipulative. also tomatos aren't technically a vegetable. maybe try thinking before posting passive agressive polls next time
🤡 jizzardtower Follow
shgdfdsg these tags. yes. chicken wings my favourite vegetable
✴ cadylady2002 Follow
Haha. I just realized the #eggplant looks a little like a d***. That is so #funny !!
👁 shreksbellybutton Follow
🦷 pigeonsarecool Follow
CHICKEM WIMGS
🍵 souperdouper Follow
shoutout to soup. won't stop making shoutouts for soup until one hears me and comes walkig over. i want soup.
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How did you develop your art style if you don't mind me asking? What does your process look like?
Asking cause your art is GORGEOUS and it makes me so happy I love your use of COLORS AND EXPRESSIONS SO SO COOL
Thank you for this ask, you’re so kind! So so thrilled when people say my art makes them happy. I don’t think there’s anything better than knowing someone responded in a good way to something you created, that’s very special to me!
If anyone has questions about this/ wants to talk about art more, my inbox is open! I’d love to hear your thoughts
long answer under cut ~500
Thoughts on style -
Lots of my posts have a heavy Darwyn Cooke/ Bruce Timm influence thanks to my DC hyperfixation. Others are inspired by old and new comics, traditional paintings, animations, toys, book illustrations and vintage posters!
I’m obsessed with so many different kinds of art. Everyone’s work is so beautiful in different ways. I love collecting and surrounding myself in art that interests me because I want my brain to absorb and rotate it all in the background.
I try to hyper analyse them and decide what specifically appeals to me about it so I can try to incorporate it.
Sometimes these can contradict ( eg. I can like a piece for being really dark/ another piece for being really bright) and that’s okay, I can just do different pieces in response to both.
I also try to decide what I don’t like, or how I might do things differently so I know what to avoid. I think that helps me spot flaws when I’m working, if things aren’t going quite right. all the time fr
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Thoughts on process -
I use pinterest and PureRef a lot to collect/ organize references.
I roughly scribble layouts when I’m working out an idea and quickly test colors/ lighting at the same time. I try to focus on the overall feel and make sure the focal point will read well from a distance, rather than the little details.
Smaller issues get ironed out during the second prototype, like correcting poses/ expressions/ scaling.
It becomes the mould for the final version, which is sometimes just the second prototype sanded smooth. More often than not, it's done from scratch, which is surprisingly faster/ neater.
This example only covers two prototypes but sometimes it takes more, especially if it’s something more complicated. Everything currently sat in my wip folder, for taking too long.
I mirror the canvas a lot in case I’m making any major mistakes and I liquify shapes to make them more balanced if I have to.
I do a lot of color and value fixing with the sliders at the very end. I’ll screenshot and compare the changes side by side to make sure I’m not making it worse, but I’m trying to cut down on this and trust my instincts more.
If all else fails and I desperately need to rescue a piece of art that isn’t working, I’ll try to crop the salvageable bit. No one needs to know how much I struggled with X if I never show them
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Art book recs -
Color and light by James Gurney - everything you ever wanted to know about colour and lighting
Framed ink by Marcos Mateu-Mestre - all about composition and values, making pieces feel more complete
Both are amazing books that cover a lot of ground, but they're very concise and easy to understand, I found them super helpful!
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