Tumgik
spookykrishna · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media
Re-upload
23 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 5 years
Text
An artist : Aw man! I saw my arts were reposted on Instagram. I’ve asked them to take my arts down but they ignored me.
Me : Say no more! Click this link, then click ‘fill out this form’. Fill the form and wait for about 1-2 days, the staffs will remove the image you were reporting from the reposter’s account :^)
355K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 5 years
Note
YOUR ART IS SO ADORABLE I LOVE IT !!!!!
Woah. I’m sorry I took so long, I didn’t realized I had messages. Thanks fam :) I haven’t drawn until recently but I do appreciate the message.
2 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 5 years
Note
Heyyy i really love your RH fanart!!! its so cute :^)
Thanks fam :D
0 notes
spookykrishna · 5 years
Text
Tumblr media
27 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
i hate this website for this 
37K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 6 years
Note
Hey its the sharing art anon I posted my art it was a wip but it got like 2 notes I know I shouldn't be obsessed with notes but I can't help it everyone is getting successful by the day they get love and attention and I never get anything it's just not fair I feel like i have to pander to people then they will like my stuff
I’m sorry you feel that way. But to put it into perspective I can tell you that at least part of the mod team doesn’t get over 2 notes on their own stuff either. Notes are not always directly linked to your success. It’s a result of cultivating a community - and that does in some cases require you to find common ground with a lot of people. That is unfortunately how it works. But like I said:  a bunch of people on redline don’t exactly reap notes either, and we’re doing just fine. I personally posted a huge WIP some weeks ago, one of my best pieces in the works - and it still hasn’t got any notes. But does it really matter at all?  I was learning during the process and I liked doing it. And if you want to look at it in a cynical way, what is a note exactly? someone clicking a button. We as artists need to grow beyond the thought that other’s online clicks warrant so much of our attention when we’re just trying to have fun with our hobby.  It can be hard when you’re just getting started because it seems logical that people who hoard notes are hogging your spotlight too. They’re not. Give it time, give yourself time. Learn to become a lone wolf. Love your craft and what you do - and then learn to publish it out of spite. Defy yourself to become better - there’s really no other way around it.
So sorry. The art world is rough like that, both digital and analogue. The best you can do is rise above it and thrive in your craft and the learning experience. This might sound harsh but trust me, it comes from a place of love, cause we’ve all been there. You can do this. - Mod Wackart
161 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 6 years
Text
How do I get my art noticed online; A simple guide based on what I have experienced.
This is one of my most asked questions so I am going to try and offer what advice I can. It certainly did not make any sense to me years ago and I would have liked a bit of help.
To preface this entire guide will be from the perspective of an artist attracting an audience for their work that is interested in buying and supporting their art.
Understanding and reaching the audience.
These are the people you want to see your work. If you are trying to create something commercially viable you must always keep the audience in mind. What matters to you is often lost on them and it is easy to lose track of that when you are emotionally involved in your work. 
Everything I discuss from here on is centred around the audience and how they will potentially regard you and your artwork. 
1. Time does not matter to the audience. 
I see this brought up a lot. “I worked very hard for a long time on my art, someone else did not, why don’t people appreciate that.”
To be incredibly blunt, why should they? Two artists create two similar pieces of work. One took 3 days, one took 3 hours. Both are at the same technical level and a similar concept. Why should one be “worth” anything more to the audience, who only sees the end result.
Tumblr media
Time rarely matters to the audience. An audience with no art background of any kind will find it very hard to judge how long someone spent on a piece of art (especially digital art) unless-
It’s very clear. A huge traditional painting for example, with something for scale. A linked video showing the process. 
The artist states the time taken somewhere. Again, this is only really going to matter to the audience if it surprises them or justifies their own assumptions about the work. (It looks good, but they work quickly, how do they do it!)
I know there will be exceptions. People who really appreciate art will understand and recognise the time taken to create it. You aren’t leaving your success to exceptions though. You need to work with the majority.
Taking a long time to produce a piece of work only really informs your potential audience that they are going to have to wait a while to receive the content. If the work or the concept behind it are strong enough this is not a problem. It hurts an unknown artist trying to establish themselves though for the following reasons… 
2. Your upload schedule.
Tumblr media
People like consistency and the best way to capture any kind of audience in media is with quick regular uploads of content they are prepared for, are looking for or easily understand. I will list a few things that I feel an audience appreciates or deviates towards.
A regular upload schedule, be it daily, twice a week, even once a month. As long as it is clear. This is a great way to keep viewers coming back to you once they find your work and are happy with the content you appear to be providing. 
The time you upload matters. If you post your artwork while the world is asleep no one is going to see it. On sites like tumblr this is even worse, hours can go by and your work will be pushed further and further down the audiences dashboard.
Consistent content. It’s great to try new stuff, but unless your audience knows you for it it could possibly confuse people browsing your page or site. Artists often get categorised as “The dude that draws X, Y Z” for a reason, it’s just easier for an audience to understand.
Do not add unnecessary comments to posts. Nothing puts people off more than 2 paragraphs of text explaining the process or a personal story on why it took so long. Save that for a separate post, consider that your audience needs to share your image. Make it as easy to share as possible.
3. Your content and the concept.
Content is important. Your finished artwork can be technically beautiful, but if there is nothing there for people to understand or relate to they will have no reason to care, or they will be purely judging your work on its level of technical ability. 
That can only go so far if the content is too strange, specific or incomprehensible. Very few people are going to share a technically impressive piece of work if it disgusts confuses or upsets them in some other aspect. 
Vice versa, a strong or interesting concept can take very simple artwork a very long way. The perfect storm is to have both a fantastic concept and strong artwork working together, but you must consider how much work that will mean you have to do and how fast can you do it. Find a balance. 
What grabs an audience varies greatly. You can build up your own brand with your own ideas concepts and characters as long as there is a consistent theme. More often than not an audience will look for:
Things they recognise 
Things they can understand at a glance
Things that are relevant to them and their lives
Consider these examples, try to consider which one has the most immediate appeal to the general public:
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
4. Make things easy for them, some important general advice. 
Upload on as many sites as possible, and where appropriate. (No one on a website purely for webcomics is going to appreciate your oil paintings, for example).
Join forums, sign up for art sites. Get to know people and make contacts to get your work out there. Understand the audience on the sites you frequent and what content they do and don’t enjoy. This takes time, this does not happen overnight. You have to commit and find your own path here. 
The audience will not just come to you. You need to be proactive. You have to get out there and find them, but be careful, nobody likes to feel like they’re being sold something. 
Wherever you post your art, MAKE IT EASY FOR PEOPLE TO FIND AND SHARE! Tag, list and group your content. Tags allow people to find things they already like, make use of that. Give them as few reasons as possible not to share your content. Put yourself in the shoes of the audience and think about what they would and would not want to share with their friends and people that know them. 
To conclude
Tumblr media
I hope this will give some people who are really lost a few extra ideas when it comes to creating commercially viable content. It upsets me to say this but sometimes there are ideas that, no matter how beautifully illustrated or conceptually brilliant, will just not resonate with certain groups of people.
This is a sad reality, but if this is an issue for you don’t worry. Use this information to create content you know people will enjoy, make a profit from that and then when you have the time and money make the things you really want to make.
35K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 6 years
Text
What was the last time I enjoyed making art?
0 notes
spookykrishna · 6 years
Text
Tying your self worth as a creator to how many followers, notes, and reblogs you get is unhealthy
I really truly feel like we need to talk about this, especially as someone who has grown up as an artist online.
I’ve absorbed some unhealthy mindsets over the years and have since spent a long time unlearning them, this is definitely one of the most insidious ones.
It’s SO easy to get into a mindset that unless you get x number of notes on your work like all those other creators, what you make isn’t worth anything.
But the truly nasty part about this mindset is you never reach “x number”, because it always gets bigger!
100 notes, 500 notes, 1,000 notes, 10,000 notes… as soon as you get a single post that reaches one of your milestones - you want it to get bigger.
It’s not surprising i mean there’s entire video games where the only reward is the number getting bigger, there’s a sense of validation from seeing that number grow.
But the internet is fickle, you cannot predict what will be picked up and what won’t. This is important to remember, so much of it is based on chance and not on your personal skill.
Like, there’s a constant stream of new content being put up online every second. Having someone see your post at all is honestly amazing if you think about it.
Anyway, it’s so so easy and so unbelievably unhealthy to fall into a mindset of ‘nobody reblogs my work, I can’t create anything good’. But it’s just not true!
Your value as a creator is not determined by a number on your social media page.
It’s determined by you, and what you value in your work. For your own mental health, try not to focus on the numbers.
Focus on the people - your friends, that person who likes and reblogs everything you post, the people who wait excitedly for your next creation. They’re the ones who matter, not the number at the bottom.
It’s not easy, but the less you tie your self worth to a nebulous, unreachable number the better you’ll feel about your work.
11K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 6 years
Text
Here’s a thing, if you have artist friends, of course you support them. That kinda goes without saying (unless their art is like, racist or some shit, in which case, why are you even friends). And its totally ok that not everyone has time to check everything out all the time and give detailed kudos or constructive criticism or w/e but sometimes it’s nice, and it really usually doesn’t take a lot of time, to let someone know you looked at/listened to/read their thing and what you thought of it. Otherwise it can often feel like you’re just throwing your stuff out into the void and no one cares, which can be super disheartening. But tiny messages (or even just tags on a post) acknowledging that at least 1 person saw it and thought something about it already can give such a boost in motivation and it literally takes less than a minute to give this to someone. You don’t have to do it all the time either, of course, just every now and then. Support isn’t just saying you support someone and occasionally hitting the reblog button on one of their posts. It goes a little bit further than that and of course, coming from an artist this sounds like begging for response, but it really isn’t, it’s more about stuff I’ve noticed talking to friends and other artists. 
Please support your artists. Don’t just say you do, but actually show up every once in a while and give them a small reason to carry on with their shit.
38 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
17 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
2 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Text
IF YOUR ART GETS STOLEN
https://www.tumblr.com/dmca Go there, and do as the instructions say. When my art was stolen, I got the post reported, and it was taken down. Don’t worry, it doesn’t just take down the sources post, but it takes down all the reblogged posts too. Please give this a reblog, many artists out there may not know this is here. And remember, ask permission before sharing, or don’t post it.
424K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
A quick sketch
4 notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Text
Note to self
Stop thinking: “I’m not talented enough to execute this concept.” Start thinking: “I’m going to be a stronger artist when I’ve finished this piece.”
181K notes · View notes
spookykrishna · 7 years
Photo
Tumblr media
The only person I would watch unboxing stuff
10 notes · View notes