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#Norles art
ghostradiodylan · 12 days
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More Rylan artwork by Norles! I’ve seen the first one on Pinterest (uncredited, naturally) but only the first version where Ryan is very pale. The artist actually listened to feedback and fixed his skin tone which I really appreciate, and made this other cute collage style piece of them in an 80’s AU too. My phone wasn’t able to translate most of it but apparently Kaitlyn is betting against Dylan at baseball and if he loses, Ryan has to go out on a date with her. Do we think 80’s Dylan is as hopeless at sports as contemporary Dylan? 😂
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thedigitalmuseum · 1 year
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Dreaming of DAM: Redesigning Newfields’ Online Collections
An hour-long webinar hosted and moderated by Alex Kron and Nik Honeysett from Balboa Park Online Collaborative. This webinar features Samantha Norling, Anne Young, and Daniel Keller from the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, who share their ongoing efforts to update their collections data and infrastructure. With a critical eye on their collection and archival portals, Samantha, Anne, and Daniel present an overview of their project's progress; grant funding, staffing, and resources that make the project possible; efforts toward Open Access; lessons learned; and diagrams depicting how their technical infrastructure and existing systems will be updated.
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owlart18 · 11 months
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Some old oc (and a cat) sketches that I found on my old phone!
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partydressfancy · 1 year
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Katarina Norling
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re learning volume and perspective and all that: have you tried drawabox? it's very artist focused and almost painfully granular at times but my understanding of shape in space did improve even though I didn't get very far into the exercises
Nope. Thank you, I'll check it out!
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nyuuronfly · 7 months
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quick doodle showing how you draw perspective, if that's ok?
i really like your art btw, you're one of the few people i usually go to for reference for drawings and actively follow
i'm definitely not the best teacher haha! this may not be useful. in general, my approach to perspective is the basic stuff: horizon lines are the most important, and vanishing points are placed along it. I am working on a drawing right now which is pushing perspective, its my first very extreme fisheye lense one. I could use it as an example of somethings.
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the horizontal line in the middle is the "horizon line" or "eye level." It shows that anything above the line is above the viewer, and anything below it is below. So below, you are looking at the top of things, and above, you are looking at the under-side of things. The other points are the furthest possible point down an axis. In this extreme perspective, you can see all the way to the right and left (or east/west) of the viewer. So it is very distorted. Anything that is getting further away from a viewer along a certain axis is moving closer to a respective vanishing point. so as we go further right, they converge toward the right point. upwards is converging into the upwards point. etc. The guides are there mainly as reminders of how to keep certain dimensions in mind. But the most important thing is to think of things 3-dimensionally and visualize. I'm freehanding this, so its imperfect. But hopefully that illustrates some of the idea. Normally, perspective does not have to curve. It curves when there is two vanishing points for polar opposite directions like up/down etc. but for lower field-of-view "camera," where just one point on an axis is visible or relevant, i dont need to do that.
If you're interested in learning perspective properly, the two books you might want to look into are either Perspective Made Easy by Ernest Norling, or How to Draw by Scott Robertson. The later is more advanced, but is basically the best resource. I probably could learn a lot from it myself.
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dino-boyo-agere · 7 months
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Hihi Nate:D! Good to talk to you agains! I wanted to ask a lil question + show off my agere oc:]
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Do you think they'd get along with spot ors Toggy? I'd like to think they'd be great friends ⊂⁠(⁠´⁠・⁠◡⁠・⁠⊂⁠ ⁠)⁠∘⁠˚⁠˳⁠° sorry they look roughs, this is my first time drawing themm
Noel, they/them. An alien from the Star HD: 189733b:D
Haii, It's really grate talking to you again too!
Noel looks super adorable and I think they would get along with either of my babs hehe Though it probably depends on Noel's personality and general mood.
Toggy is the quiet, laid back and chill type of kiddo. Likes to read and needs some time alone every once in a while.
Spots is loud, bold and a social butterfly. He's constantly moving and can not shut up to save his life lol
I'm 100% certain that my CG Sona, Loo dote on Norl like crazy though! Loo has a soft spot for extraterrestrials since she's part Gremlin.
Oh and there is also my sona Shēdo, who does age regress due to trauma. But this boy is not a stricktly SFW Sona (he has sum gore art). He's Loos main kiddo, but hasn't really come to terms with his regression yet. He's a good kid! (He has no into post.. yet)
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Banners I made with my babs!!
One with & one without Shēdo.. don't know which one I like better hehe
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danydarkly · 1 year
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Hi! This is more of a theory-related question, so no need for drawings or sketches whatsoever! :)) so, how did you learn to draw animals so well and how long did it take? Also, when it comes to drawing characters (talking about humans, more or less) have you ever pursued the realism track and what helped you achieve your style? Any art book reccomandations, please? Thank you very much, Dany and may 2023 be an awesome year for you and your dear ones!
Hello! Tbh, I find that I still have a lot to learn. One of my goals this year (as with every year) is to get better at art in general - with a focus on improving anatomy, gesture, expression, etc. The key with any area of art that you wish to improve on is to do studies - I haven't done any in a while, but it's gonna be something that I plan to commit to at least once a week ^^; One's art style is essentially shorthand for realism, so knowing the fundamentals and observing other "shorthand" approaches from artists that you admire will help you develop your own art style. For instance, I struggled in the beginning to draw wolves, but when I looked at references of real wolves, as well as how artists that I like drew wolves, I eventually narrowed down my shorthand for a wolf that worked with the style I established for Red & Wolf. Your style can change as you get more familiar with drawing certain things, or as your tastes change, or even to suit the medium you're working with, so it can take years before you settle on a definitive art style. I haven't even settled yet, haha. As I've done more animation-related stuff and comics I've slowly been going simpler and simper with my art style, I also don't have the time or patience to do any crazy rendering so that's gotten simpler too. It's all shorthand - based on necessity and what you actually enjoy drawing (hope that all made sense aaaa).
Here are some book recommendations: * Force: Drawing Human Anatomy - Michael D. Mattesi * Force: Dynamic Drawing - Michael D. Mattesi * MORPHO (any in series, depending on your area of focus) - Michel Lauricella * Color and Light: A Guide for the Realist Painter - James Gurney * Framed Ink: Drawing and Composition for Visual Storytellers - Marcos Mateu-Mestre * Perspective Made Easy - Ernest Ralph Norling * Science of Creature Design: Understanding Animal Anatomy - Terryl Whitlatch Hope this was helpful to you and I hope you and yours have an awesome year as well :>
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(Study Planning: Art Book Edition)
Earnest R. Norling’s Perspective Made Easy [Half Complete; In Progress]
Andrew Loomis’ Drawing the Head & Hands [Started; In Progress]
Michael Hampton’s FIGURE DRAWING Design & Invention [Started; Waiting (will continue after Loomis)]
Michael Lauricella’s MORPHO Series [Started; Waiting (will continue after Hampton)]
Gottfried Bammes’ The Complete Guide to Anatomy for Artists & Illustrators [Started; Waiting (will continue after Hampton)]
Thomas Thorspecken’s URBAN SKETCHING: the complete guide to techniques [Started, Extended Hiatus (… there’s a pandemic & it makes me yearn too much ><)]
Jessica Abel (& co.)’s Drawing Words and Writing Pictures [Started; Brief Hiatus (prolly comes after Bammes or Lauricella)]
Jessica Abel (& co.)’s Mastering Comics: Drawing Words and Writing Pictures Continued [Planned (gotta finish the first book lmaooo)]
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Happy (late) Birthday Noel!
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ghostradiodylan · 22 days
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How does this work with gravity? I don’t know and I don’t care. 😍
Pinterest is great because it’s full of uncredited art /s ಠ_ಠ I’ve been trying to find a source on this for like an hour. I strongly suspect this is by a Russian illustrator named Norles because her style of drawing Dylan is pretty distinctive. I don’t see it on her profile but spending too long on Deviantart makes my phone browser crash so that’s just an educated guess.
This one is definitely hers.
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If anyone is 100% on the source let me know!
Edit: found more sketches from Norles on another profile and now I’m convinced she is the artist because the hair textures are nearly identical. Calling case closed on this art mystery!
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websitewizard2005 · 2 years
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decided to revisit some old ocs, they’re from a musical i started writing 2 years ago and never finished hfawtfas.
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vindrawins · 3 years
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'Perspective made Easy' review
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Wow, Ernest Ralph Norling explains 'perspective' with so simple examples that you can easily apply in real life. This book clears very basic topics like vanishing point, relationship of eye level to perspective, 1& 2 point perspective, shadows, interiors etc. Actually their are many advance books on this topic but for beginners and artists, has to read this atleast once.
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partydressfancy · 1 year
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Katarina Norling
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Art Of Hel
At my Waldorf school, World Mythology played a significant role in the curriculum, though it was Norse Mythology that had a lasting impact on me. Hel and her brother Fenrir were the characters that enthralled me most of all. But I suppose that won’t come as a surprise! I haven’t spent much time thinking about Hel in recent years – my loss – but during the past few days, I’ve been delighting in…
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zer0cracy · 5 years
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Alright, its officially 2019.
Good luck.
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