Receding objects in perspective.

shelbyhughesillustration:

Have you ever been trying to draw tiles on a wall or on the floor in perspective, but notice that after you’ve drawn them, they don’t look like they’re all the same shape or size? 

Well here’s a tutorial on how to fix that.

Your picture probably looks like this, right?

Well, i’m here to tell you how to fix that…Let’s start out with your basics.

The gray line is the horizon line, and the black dot is your horizon line. These are essential for the first steps of perspective. Without these, your perspective may turn out wonky and just not flattering to the eyes. Right now we’ll work in One point perspective.

Now let’s pretend we’ll be drawing a hallway. Draw a vertical line where the edge of the wall is.

Now, from the tips of the bottom and top of your wall, you’re going to need to draw a line extending all the way to the vanishing point. If you’re working in photoshop you could either use the line tool, or shift+click. If traditional, you’ll need to use a ruler.

Now that we have the wall that’s in perspective, it’s time to draw the rest of the lines. here I’ve drawn the wall facing us that’s closest, the ceiling, the floor line, and the end of the hallway. ASSUMING that you are working in one point perspective, all vertical lines are straight and parallel to each other, and all horizontal lines are straight and parallel to each other. 

Now here I have erased the lines that extended beyond the back wall, and found the center point of the edge of the left wall. From there, you draw an extended line just as before towards your vanishing point.

now make a vertical line where your first “tile” is. 

now this may be a little hard to explain. Now you’re going to draw a line coming from the corner of the wall, through the corner where your line meets the tile you just drew, and all the way to the ground line. 

You see where these two lines meet? you’re going to draw a vertical line to the ceiling from here.

Like so! 

Now rinse and repeat! you should have perfectly even spaced tiles now! And if you have tiles on the ceiling

Just draw horizontal lines connecting to the vertical lines!

Now just erase anyhing you don’t need and…viola! Perfect tiles in perspective!!

I hope this helps!! 😀

animate-mush:

amatara:

I’m pretending all the time to be, kinder, stronger, funnier, more sociable than I am. I guess we’re all like that but it just feels so inadequate.

What’s the difference?

I know it sounds flippant but… certain things are fundamentally performative.  And other things are so close as makes no difference.

Kindness is performative.  Actions are kind, and people are kind by performing those actions.  You can’t “pretend” to be kinder than you are, you can only perform kindness or not perform kindness, and choosing to perform kindness is always worthwhile, no matter how much you may second-guess your motivations.

Strength is so many things.  It takes strength to pretend a strength you don’t feel.  And the way to achieve strength is to exercise it, so long as you do it in enough moderation to not strain or break anything.  Being able to affect strength when necessary while being able to put it down again when that in turn is necessary is healthy.  Everyone starts weight training with the littlest weights.  It’s not fake or pretending to do what you gotta do in any given situation.

Funniness lives in the interlocutor, not in the speaker.  It doesn’t matter how funny you think you are (or think you are pretending to be) – that’s not how it’s measured.  At what point are you “pretending” to be a musician if the music still gets made?  And often what it’s tempting to describe in first person as “pretending” is more accurately described in the third person as “practicing” – which is of course the way you cause things to Be.

Sociability is also performative.  Pretending to be sociable is just…being sociable, despite a disinclination towards it.  It’s making an effort towards something you value.  So long as the effort is not so great that it backfires into resentment, there’s no practical difference.  

Qualities or activities or whatever are no less worthy because you have to actively choose to perform them.  If anything, the worthiness lies in the act of choosing.  It’s not “pretending” – it’s agency.

tl;dr: ain’t nothing wrong with “fake it till you make it.”  A plastic spoon* holds just as much soup as a “real” one

* I keep wanting to talk about semantic domains!  Artifacts are defined by their utility, whereas living things are defined by their identity.  So plastic forks are still forks, but plastic flowers aren’t flowers.  So there’s two pep-talk messages to take away from this: (1) for certain things, the distinction between “fake” and “real” isn’t a relevant one so long as they still get the job done, and (2) the purpose of a living thing is to be the thing that it is.  The idea of a “useless person” is as semantically nonsensical as the idea of “pretend kindness” (or fake cutlery).

shock:

avoiding using unnecessary physical control with your animals to train them fosters a desire to work with you and a bond of trust. instead of belly-rolling or scruffing or hitting or spraying your kitten/puppy for nipping you during play, you just have to stand up and leave. 

animals will very quickly understand that ‘oh, when i do this thing it causes all the fun things to stop.’ however, if you immediately resort to physical control in all circumstances, you’re teaching them that your relationship is based on fear and control and they’ll do things for you based on FEAR and not understanding.

they don’t understand why something is bad if you beat them for it, or shove their faces in something, if you don’t give them an alternative and acceptable behavior 

my dog doesn’t bite me when we play because i taught her that she needs to respect that other people (and dogs and other animals) have limits and she is ALSO allowed to express her limits and will have them respected which also means that she will give plenty of warning before resorting to physical force herself (ie, she will growl and back away and other things and express very clearly she doesn’t want something instead of immediately biting and snapping unprovoked). 

she knows what she’s allowed to play with because i made it that way and because she realized if she destroys her things she doesn’t get them back, and if she doesn’t destroy my things she gets to play and gets more fun and is praised and encouraged for doing things that are appropriate and she’s learned to value her things and to understand in dog-capacity that my things also have value to me, and that we can trade. she’ll try to offer her things for mine. if i have a toy of hers, 90% of the time she’ll run and grab one of her equally-valuable toys or one of my socks to trade. 

it’s respect, both for boundaries and for the intelligence of your animals. not everything has to resort to physical control. 

iguanamouth:

AND ITS FINALLY OVER………… 

⁽ ᵗʰᵉ ᴬ ᵐᵉᵃⁿˢ ᵗʰᵃᵗ ᵈʳᵃʷᶦⁿᵍ ʷᵃˢ ᵃⁿᶦᵐᵃᵗᵉᵈ ᶦⁿ ˢᵒᵐᵉ ʷᵃʸ ⁾

back in 2012, almost SIX YEARS ago now, i joined up with oxboxers POKEMONATHON challenge, a project that asked all the artists involved to draw all of the first gen pokemon ( and at the time i thought id be able to pump em out in the first year, no problem )

what actually happened is through constant starting and stopping it ended up becoming an accidental diary of my progression with digital art – since i started it up back when i was still getting used to working with a drawing tablet, the differences between the very first one i did around five years ago

image

and the very LAST

image

ARE PRETTY BIG, and even though i was certain i was never gonna finish it most of the time ( i didnt do ANYTHING for 2014 ahahah ) im really glad i kept up with it

the full versions of all of em are HERE ( although heads up i was a lil more obnoxious five years ago for Sure ) and uhhhhhhhhh thanks for reading

urie:

urie:

urie:

urie:

my hot take as someone who has experienced the lowest of lows in terms of severe depression and anxiety and executive dysfunction: the whole “not everyone is neurotypical karen” mindset is legitimately damaging and destructive and ultimately will make you feel worse and more isolated

eating well and exercising and etc absolutely helps with mental illness. obviously it’s irritating to hear that when those things feel like impossible tasks, i get that, and i’ve been there. but forcing yourself to eat better, to walk more, to get up out of bed and shower even when you don’t want to, those things help. they clear your head. they make you feel better. they absolutely do. getting there is hard, but once you do it, it does help

rejecting any kind of help, even the most benign suggestion, from someone who is trying their best to think positively for you and shoulder the emotional burden with you, is going to make you feel worse. it’s going to make you feel that much more cut off and lonely and frustrated. i have isolated myself and ruined friendships with people because i chose to close myself off from people who were just trying to help and i convinced myself that they didn’t understand me and no one would ever understand me. what did that get me in the end? genuinely nothing. it made me feel even more alone.

in 2018 i encourage people who suffer like i have to see where people are coming from with cheesy self-care advice. they’re coming from the heart. and sometimes, doing a face mask or taking a hot bath or eating a nutritious meal or getting up to watch the sunrise or even just one yoga class can make you feel that much closer to the person you want to be. a lot of recovery from mental illness is “fake it till you make it” type shit. so don’t reject even the corniest advice because you are convinced it won’t help you. sometimes it really does. and you shouldn’t keep denying yourself even the smallest of victories because you feel like it’s easier to wallow in how bad you feel. it is so difficult to do good things for yourself and your body, but it is so rewarding

hey, pour le “hi, I’m not from the US” ask set: 1,4,5,11,13,15,22,27 parce que honnêtement je suis pas sûre de savoir y répondre moi même pour la plupart ! (si c’est trop tu peux ne pas tout faire !)

!!! je suis super en retard mais allons-y owo (je réponds en anglais pour le coup mais merci!!! et tkt ça fait pas trop ^^)

1. favourite place in your country?
la Bretagne tbh

4. favourite dish specific for your country?
uuuuh… is ratatouille a specifically french dish because if yes, that :þ that or ~poulet de Bresse~ bc hey, it’s good chicken

5. favourite song in your native language?
i can’t think of any specific one but i grew up on Manau which :100: and also Grand Corps Malade wrote really really really good stuff aaaa

11. favourite native writer/poet?
Pierre Bottero o:

13. does your country (or family) have any specific superstitions or traditions that might seem strange to outsiders?
my country i doooon’t really know (idk of any superstitions/traditions that are Typically French In Every Part Of France), my family definitely. can’t think of very many specific ones and i’m not entirely sure whether some of them are just local or actually familial, but we’re kinda a bunch of weirdos lol

15. a saying, joke, or hermetic meme that only people from your country will get?
c’est pas faux

22. what makes you proud about your country? what makes you ashamed?
proud… ehhh, nothing comes to mind. fucking hate the rampant islamophobia though i’m super done with it

27. favourite national celebrity?
that’s entirely based on tweets I’ve seen bc i don’t actually know all that much about french media but Julien Doré is really fucking funny yeah

[hi, I’m not from the US ask set]