
The place where I reblog helpful resources for my art blog, @molagboop
905 posts
Hi! Happy Tuesday! Todays Tip Is On One Of My Favorite Subject, Color Theory; Specifically On Chromatic

Hi! Happy Tuesday! Today’s tip is on one of my favorite subject, color theory; specifically on chromatic fringe. It is the red fringe or hot saturated color you see at the edge of cast shadow and where it meets the light area. The rougher the object edge casting the shadow or the further away the object is, the more red fringe you’ll see. This is different than chromatic abberation, which is color fringing caused by lens failure. You can see chromatic fringe with your eyes. The more you paint from life and make observation, the easier it is to see. It’s one of those things that once you see it, you cannot unsee. :) XO, Griz
#griz #grizandnorm #tuesdaytips #colortheory #chormaticfringe #grizandnormtuesdaytips #grizandnormkittycatclub ps. On stylized painting, where you want to have a hard edge on a shadow, you don’t always have to put it. Like everything in art, you can choose to put something in or not. But it’s always good to know your basic and know the rules before breaking it. Happy painting!
-
wolfsskull liked this · 10 months ago
-
shakychameleon reblogged this · 10 months ago
-
miacviii liked this · 11 months ago
-
nervousscissorsgoopthing liked this · 11 months ago
-
tinylittlelotus liked this · 11 months ago
-
imma-put-dis-here reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
cut-aare liked this · 1 year ago
-
liliennacht liked this · 1 year ago
-
darradreamer reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
darradreamer liked this · 1 year ago
-
variablecemetery reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
flxffym0th liked this · 1 year ago
-
cortomaltese21 liked this · 1 year ago
-
aku-zone reblogged this · 1 year ago
-
lilfluffaj liked this · 1 year ago
-
gogogoat495 liked this · 1 year ago
-
insertsomthinawesome liked this · 1 year ago
-
ouijaboredflan liked this · 1 year ago
-
adios-meine-freunde liked this · 2 years ago
-
pink-hope liked this · 2 years ago
-
aki13th reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
modarthelp reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
modarthelp liked this · 2 years ago
-
starspangled-monkees liked this · 2 years ago
-
silkirose liked this · 2 years ago
-
thegraphitearchives reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
cvariable reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
extremebooty reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
mi143567 reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
kazoobug liked this · 2 years ago
-
glitch-core liked this · 2 years ago
-
sonjab608 liked this · 2 years ago
-
atlastfree liked this · 2 years ago
-
nochocolatemuffins reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
there-is-no-romeo liked this · 2 years ago
-
neneeroo liked this · 2 years ago
-
artsolarsash liked this · 2 years ago
-
colorfulsaccharinecalamity liked this · 2 years ago
-
cynshia reblogged this · 2 years ago
-
etcdraws reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
hydrangeahelper reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
cafeselection reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
jularker liked this · 3 years ago
-
crypt-of-refs reblogged this · 3 years ago
-
teethorama liked this · 3 years ago
More Posts from Molagblep
Do you have any tips on digitally shading?
u gotta be very specific anon a lot of things happen when I’m shading ;u;
but here’s a very basic walkthrough of my general process (NOT a tutorial because this doesn’t go in depth at all and I guess it’s not really useful if you’re not sure what to look for?)

30-Day Character Design Challenge
This might be helpful if you’re stuck in a rut with your designs! You can do them in any order you want, as long as you do #30 last.
Put your iTunes library, favorite Spotify playlist, etc. on shuffle and design a character inspired by the first song that comes up. Bonus: do this with a playlist of music you’ve never listened to before. Extra bonus: use an instrumental-only song.
Design a character in a genre you don’t normally draw (example: if you normally high fantasy characters, you could do sci-fi, steampunk, etc.)
Draw five mouths, each of which reveal a unique character. Bonus: all are making the same expression.
Grab your oldest sketchbook that you can find and pick an old character to re-design. Bonus: pick the character by opening to a random page instead of hand-choosing.
Design ten unique hairstyles. Bonus: do a turnaround of each one.
Go to this random aesthetic generator and draw a character inspired by the result. Bonus: make the design 100% serious, even if you get “dad wave” or “soap flapper.”
Design seven pairs of shoes. Bonus: for some of the pairs, make the left and right shoes different, but still recognizable as a pair.
Draw a non-human character— the less human-looking, the better (so avoid things like elves, vampires, etc.). Bonus: Make up their species instead of using existing mythological creatures.
Design a character inspired by this poem.
Create a color palette based on the colors in your bedroom, then design a character from this palette. Bonus: don’t use the colors of your walls or floor in your palette.
Pick your favorite mythological figure and create two designs for them: one that’s as historically accurate to their time period and culture as possible, and another that takes as many artistic liberties as you want (this could a modern AU, something in your typical style, etc.).
Design a high fantasy character whose outfit is based on whatever you’re wearing right now.
Pick an order of angels and design a character based on/inspired by their description. The resulting character doesn’t necessarily have to be an angel. Bonus: pick Thrones, the giant wheels covered in eyes.
Go to this random name generator and design a character for whatever name you get. Tip: you can click each name to learn its origin and meaning.
Design ten weapons. Bonus: Base each one off a real weapon from various historical periods, but with your own twist on it.
Create as many rough thumbnail designs as you can in half an hour. Then pick your favorite and flesh them out into a more detailed character. Bonus: don’t erase anything during the timed portion.
Pick an animal and draw a human character based on it. The final design shouldn’t have the animal’s ears, tail, markings, etc.— convey it entirely though the character’s build, clothing, hair, etc. Bonus: pick the animal from the ones featured in this video series.
Design a character based on the weather wherever you are right now.
Create an outfit breakdown for a character from their underclothes to their outermost layers/armor/etc. This can be done either for one of your existing OCs or a new one. Bonus: do a turnaround for this breakdown.
Design ten unique sets of eyes. Bonus: include makeup and/or eyebrows as well.
Make up a god/goddess/deity for a nonexistent religion, then design them. Bonus: describe the symbolism of each aspect of their design.
Design a normal, modern-day character, then three genre AUs for them (e.g. cyberpunk, fantasy, Renaissance-era, etc.). They should be clearly recognizable as the same character in all four versions.
Create a character whose design combines the aesthetics of the last three movies/TV shows you watched.
Design five pieces of jewelry. Pick your favorite and create a full character design based around it. Bonus: incorporate a couple of the other pieces of jewelry into the design as well.
Pick a vehicle and design a character inspired by it. A human character, not a transformer. Bonus: use something other than a car or truck, like a plane, boat, tank, etc.
Create a character inspired by your favorite childhood stuffed animal.
Design four sets of hands. They don’t necessarily have to be human hands.
Design a historically accurate character for a decade between 1900 and 1990.
Design a haute couture-style dress based on one of your existing OC’s designs. Bonus: draw them in this dress.
Wildcard! Use everything you’ve practiced thus far to create any character design you want. The only requirement: fully flesh out their design, from sketching to line art to colors.
Go forth, have fun, and create some awesome characters! If you post what you create, feel free to tag them ‘characterdesigninspiration’








Some notes I put together for my CDA Class. Just stuff that I use. Take with grain of salt.
VERY LONG SHIMEJI TUTORIAL by Ziven
Update as of: 4/6/12
I’ve added some new Shimejis to the pack (additions may be seen below, and added stars by the names on the list of those Shimejis which now come with their own custom configuration files inside for behaviors. I’ve added two download links, one for “Mischievous” and “Calm” versions of the English Shimeji program, where the Shimeji are set to multiply more often or not at all, respectively. I personally configured the settings for these.
This is mostly because I know the program is taxing on some computers, and also because some people use them at work. On another point, they’re just difficult to enjoy, I think, if you have many of them running at one time. I’d rather have a bunch of individual ones running around than 50 of only 3 different sets.
So now that you’ve been updated, onto the tutorial!
I decided to put this here because, well, I’ve been learning about Shimeji for the last forty-eight hours nearly non-stop. In an effort to search every corner of the internet for them, I’ve done translating, a few tweaks of program behavior, and definitely enough to not have any more trouble with Shimeji. So, I’m going to post the tutorial here. If you’re as obsessive compulsive as I am and you have some questions, feel free to message me or something.
A lot of people have been posting “How to fix” and stuff like that, but they’re just really… lazy. These ways work, but only with standard shimejis and they don’t typically explain why it is that things work the way that they do.
Feel free to share this with whomever you wish, but don’t copy and paste it anywhere without my permission, k? It took a long time to put this together.
(Just as a note, I’m copying/pasting this from elsewhere - hypocrit, I know, but it’s my own tut! - so the images aren’t exactly where I’d want them, but it’ll have to do.)
So, without further ado: my Shimeji tutorial.
Keep reading