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#cartoon moms
jaxsterrapp · 1 year
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CARTOON MOMS😉
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groinattack3 · 3 months
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Peg Pete Ballbusting
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therobotmonster · 1 year
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So...
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She's divorced. The kids are off to college, and she's ready to live life to the fullest But someone had to go and kidnap her pool boy, and she must defeat eight of the Housing Association's deadliest hottest moms to gain the powers needed to rescue him.
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Technical hoozits below the fold.
I've been wanting to do something narrative with Midjourney, but consistent characters has been an issue. However, this tutorial demonstrated how you could use image prompting mid-iteration stream to create (mostly) consistent characters.
Dinosaur adventurers are a bit too wild for this technique, so going off the logic that the best part of the 'toon is the protagonist's hot mom... well, you can see the results.
I generated some initial results by a combination of image prompting and text prompting, then iterated those slowly from photographic to an animated style. The best results were then isolated, cleaned up, color-edited, and used as image prompts and prompt injections to generate initial turnarounds good enough to edit into proper reference art. This let me producer expression sheets and pose sheets that will hopefully allow for comic-style narrative.
I just also have to do the same thing with all the major characters. Including the Eight "Boss Moms"So things may be focus-dependent.
I still have a few possible power origins I'm mulling on, but functionally, she's like Megaman, in that she can beat a foe and gain a special ability and outfit change.
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krissiefox · 9 months
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Katy Kangaroo (Arcade & Atari game) Art Appreciation Post
The other night my wife and I were watching the no swear gamer*'s video on the game Kangaroo for Atari 2600, and I liked the art of the kangaroo mom on the cartridge and looked up more art of her. It turns her name is Katy Kangaroo (nickname K.O. Katy) and there's lots of different art of her for both the arcade and Atari versions of her game. she also appeared in a cartoon called Saturday Supercade! I decided to make an appreciation post for her because I have a fondness for tough cartoon animal moms who will beat the shit out of someone if they mess with her family. She's kinda like Queen Chrysalis that way. :)
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Some versions of the atari box art. On these she seems to have turned her neck ribbon around is wearing it as a bow tie.
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A more realistic take on Katy for one of the arcade machine ads.
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Art from the standing arcade machine. I think this is the version of the game they have at my local arcade. :)
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And lastly, some art of how she looks in the Saturday Starcade cartoon! Pretty adorable. :)
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*the no swear gamer is a youtube channel about old atari games. the host is very pleasant so if you like videos about old games I recommend checking out his page!
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satan-is-a-furry · 1 year
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elijones94 · 1 month
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👩🏻‍🦰 “Not so fast, Astro! Not until you’ve had your bath!” 🛸
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clambanana · 10 months
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*Gasp* Perry the Platypus!?
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archersart · 2 years
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💐👩‍👧‍👦 Happy Mothers Day! 👩‍👧‍👦💐
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ravenousnightwind · 1 year
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That one episode from Steven Universe where white diamond talks about people's "imperfections" it's all brilliant because it showcases her ability for gaslighting people on an epic scale. Like not only does she manipulate people in essentially making them not know what to say, but literally invades their minds and makes them do stuff.
"Then I'll do it for you!" Like it's the most epic of all the episodes because at the end they have to convince her that that's not how things really are, even if people have "flaws". That it's okay to be that way, okay to embrace difference. At the end, she realizes the way she's acting is exactly like she told him he was acting, except he's a child. It made her realize she too has flaws and imperfections the same as everyone.
She identified herself as this perfect individual who was never wrong. Once that realization broke her, she was able to be who she really is. Just as Steven was able to be who he is, and the rest of them.
This kind of thing is similar to real life. The issue is that most people's parents won't see this, because their idealisms block them from understanding them. They have wants and desires for their children. They get so caught up in these ideals and parenting as a role, they not only forget who they are and what they believe is right, but don't see who their children really are or who they've become.
That's why that particular episode was so great because it shows what can happen when things go the right way. It's a metaphor for something amazing. Change.
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rejectingrepublicans · 4 months
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27coughs27 · 6 months
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groinattack3 · 5 months
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Xj9 Jenny Ballbusting
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miusato · 21 days
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Lmao so I finally done drawing a lineup of P3 cast in my Highschool AU. Call them wokesona or something ahskskskskasosk
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bogleech · 8 months
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Anywhere it comes up on the internet, the show Teenage Euthanasia is either unknown or despised thanks to its not very pretty art style, some grossout jokes and a few YouTube reviewers hating on it (Mr Enter strikes again) but I think it does fun creative things with its premise and setting, which are genuinely a unique combination; a horrible deadbeat mom tries to be a slightly better mom after coming back from the dead, in a Dystopian future Florida roughly only 20 years from now.
The gags they get out of that last detail are sometimes ingenious but also painfully believable. Kids still have to go to public school for instance but the teachers have to work long distance via holographic projection from prison-like cubicle farms, where they get electrocuted if they deviate from the curriculum. Because of this, becoming a teacher is also a punishment for crime.
All police are minors, specifically poorly educated teenage girls, so they can't be held as responsible, and also so are the now strictly state-assigned doctors, even surgeons, whose training is done through a day of internet videos. Anything can be an AI and people are technically owned by different brands.
Since they've never been shown traveling anywhere else it is never made clear if their entire world is like this, or just Florida, but they also haven't ruled out that Florida simply *expands* in the next two decades.
It is actually no longer referred to as a state within the show, but ominously as a "Franchise Territory," and they do not explain what exactly that is.
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rapid-artwork · 2 months
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Been working on a secret project, and I needed to channel the "cartoon network style"
So here are some of the crayon studies I did picking apart some nostalgic characters designs.
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inkskinned · 1 year
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this is sort of pathetic, but when you were younger, you were sort of puzzled by the cartoon representations of fathers: how a kid would be outside with a mitt, waiting to play catch.
it's not that your father never played catch with you, but you also didn't like when he did. something about a hard ball coming quickly towards your face doesn't seem exciting. not that you'd ever say you don't trust him. you trust him, right?
it's not like he never tried to teach you anything. or never tried to parent. on rare days, a strange person would walk in your father's skin. bright, happy, magnificent. this version of your father was so cheerful and charismatic that you would do anything to keep him. and this is the version of your father that would laugh and gently coax you try again. this is the version of your father that would break down the small elements of a problem and point them out so you have an easier time with them.
as a kid, those days happened more often. but somewhere around 11, you started being too much of a person, and he was often cross about it. when he'd try to sit you down to learn something, you spent the whole time with your shoulders around your ears, nervous, uncertain. terrified because you didn't immediately understand how to navigate something. worried you will run out of his goodwill and then you will have the Other Father back, and you will have ruined a good day for your entire family. something about you being visibly afraid - it just made him angry. he would accuse you of not wanting to learn and storm away.
on tv, it's not like there's a lot of versions of men-who-are-mostly-fathers. they can be good dads, but usually their stories are not told in the household. so it's normal that your father is there, but he's never around. you know he was in the house, somewhere, it's just not that you guys ever... "hung out". he just seemed to get kind of bored of you, annoyed you weren't made in his perfect image. frustrated with how much energy it took to raise a kid. over time, you kind of adopt a bittersweet band around your throat - he knows nothing about me. he says at least i never abandoned my family.
and it's technically - technically - true. he was there for you. sometimes he even made an effort and made it to the big moments; the graduations and the dance recitals. he grins and tells everyone that he taught you. it almost erases the days in between, where he complains because you need a ride to school. the weeks that go by where he doesn't actually ever speak to you. the times you say i am struggling and he says figure it out on your own. i can't help you.
and that's fine! that's all fine. you can call him if you are having a problem with your car. or if you need a ride to the hospital. he loves playing hero, he just doesn't like the actual work that comes with being a father. and you've kind of made your peace with that; because you had to, because you don't want to live your life like he does; the whole world at a managed distance, a little rotating and controlled orb he can witness and take credit for but never truly love.
as an adult, you are rewatching some dumb cartoon - and again, the child standing in the rain, with a mitt, waiting for their father to come play catch. as an adult, there's this strange creeping dread - this little thing? this little thing, and their dad can't even show up for that? oh god, holyshit, it's not about the mitt, is it. oh god, holyshit, your father spent most of your life leaving you hanging.
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