People Often Say To Me: You Draw Like Some Kind Of Inhuman Machine. If I Eat Your Brain, Will I Gain






People often say to me: “You draw like some kind of inhuman machine. If I eat your brain, will I gain your power?” The answer is yes, but there is another way. The key to precise drawing is building up muscle memory so that your arm/hand/fingers do the things you want them to do when you want them to do them. Teaching yourself to draw a straight line or to make sweet curves is just a matter of practice and there are some exercises you can do to help improve. If you’re going to be doodling in class or during meetings anyway, why not put that time to good use?
-
drefvalentine liked this · 8 months ago
-
how-about-gay liked this · 8 months ago
-
premierqualitysurgicalmask reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
shvr reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
purposefulcryptic reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
purposefulcryptic liked this · 8 months ago
-
mothematised reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
mothematised liked this · 8 months ago
-
ennis liked this · 8 months ago
-
magicalprofessorsludgedeputy liked this · 8 months ago
-
sei-shounen-yugi reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
meruleusa liked this · 8 months ago
-
shanyata liked this · 8 months ago
-
pumpagon reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
vhaerath reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
gypsykimball liked this · 8 months ago
-
japanese-gum liked this · 8 months ago
-
ciaran liked this · 8 months ago
-
floral-bookcases liked this · 8 months ago
-
emimations reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
emimations liked this · 8 months ago
-
fibonaccisequence reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
fibonaccisequence liked this · 8 months ago
-
arkay-vingt reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
arkay-vingt liked this · 8 months ago
-
voltfruits liked this · 8 months ago
-
meltryllis reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
ghostblogging reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
st-just liked this · 8 months ago
-
whosgot2thumbs reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
zoobus reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
foxyoptimist reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
the-wolf-emoji reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
the-wolf-emoji liked this · 8 months ago
-
starlit-meloncholia reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
giantfan1 liked this · 8 months ago
-
effervescentprawn reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
bungacintaa reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
bungacintaa liked this · 8 months ago
-
jvl-h liked this · 8 months ago
-
ankewehner liked this · 8 months ago
-
mosswraith reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
mosswraith liked this · 8 months ago
-
finnean-finn liked this · 8 months ago
-
silverandspessartine reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
silverandspessartine liked this · 8 months ago
-
happynamtea liked this · 8 months ago
-
nijiroz liked this · 8 months ago
More Posts from Cc-referenceblog
Really says something about the dire state of offerings for men interested in sewing their own clothes that even searching things like “interesting men’s clothing patterns” brings up articles with links to four or five whole websites that primarily offer admittedly nice but practically identical patterns for making button-ups and work pants and maybe a varsity/bomber jacket if you’re lucky.
(Branching out into historical costuming for everyday wear is like your one shot at variation, and even then, the ratio of men’s to women’s patterns on every website is frustrating to say the least.)
Patternmakers as a trans man I am begging you. Give me a little more to work with here.
Ref Recs for Whump Writers
Violence: A Writer’s Guide: This is not about writing technique. It is an introduction to the world of violence. To the parts that people don’t understand. The parts that books and movies get wrong. Not just the mechanics, but how people who live in a violent world think and feel about what they do and what they see done.
Hurting Your Characters: HURTING YOUR CHARACTERS discusses the immediate effect of trauma on the body, its physiologic response, including the types of nerve fibers and the sensations they convey, and how injuries feel to the character. This book also presents a simplified overview of the expected recovery times for the injuries discussed in young, otherwise healthy individuals.
Body Trauma: A writer’s guide to wounds and injuries. Body Trauma explains what happens to body organs and bones maimed by accident or intent and the small window of opportunity for emergency treatment. Research what happens in a hospital operating room and the personnel who initiate treatment. Use these facts to bring added realism to your stories and novels.
10 B.S. Medical Tropes that Need to Die TODAY…and What to Do Instead: Written by a paramedic and writer with a decade of experience, 10 BS Medical Tropes covers exactly that: clichéd and inaccurate tropes that not only ruin books, they have the potential to hurt real people in the real world.
Maim Your Characters: How Injuries Work in Fiction: Increase Realism. Raise the Stakes. Tell Better Stories. Maim Your Characters is the definitive guide to using wounds and injuries to their greatest effect in your story. Learn not only the six critical parts of an injury plot, but more importantly, how to make sure that the injury you’re inflicting matters.
Blood on the Page: This handy resource is a must-have guide for writers whose characters live on the edge of danger. If you like easy-to-follow tools, expert opinions from someone with firsthand knowledge, and you don’t mind a bit of fictional bodily harm, then you’ll love Samantha Keel’s invaluable handbook
THERE IS. a website. that takes 3D models with seams and pulls it apart to make a plushie pattern and informs you where things need to be edited or darts added for the best effect. and then it lets you scale it and print off your pattern. and I want to lose my MIND because I've lost steam halfway through so many plushie patterns in the mind numbing in betweens of unwrapping, copying all of the meshes down as pieces, transferring those, testing them, then finding obvious tweaks... like... this would eradicate 99% of my trial and error workflow for 3D models to plushies & MAYBE ILL FINALLY FINISH SCREAMTAIL...