
All my art stuff goes here! Enjoy fanart of whatever is giving me brainrot atm and me trying to figure out my ocs stories!
1320 posts
Extremely Funny When AI Artists Feel The Need To Put Watermarks On Their Images
extremely funny when AI artists feel the need to put watermarks on their images
-
errormacrozak liked this · 5 months ago
-
thesues-scamander liked this · 6 months ago
-
chuuya-apologist liked this · 6 months ago
-
usuallydistinguishedcolor reblogged this · 6 months ago
-
lighlioness liked this · 7 months ago
-
constructed-reality liked this · 7 months ago
-
debellatis reblogged this · 7 months ago
-
debellatis liked this · 7 months ago
-
amongus28 liked this · 8 months ago
-
ninbinary liked this · 8 months ago
-
seeyalazergator reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
seeyalazergator liked this · 8 months ago
-
vengefulpumpkins liked this · 8 months ago
-
colorguardian10 liked this · 8 months ago
-
allanonkisigar reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
theblehthatbloos reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
theblehthatbloos liked this · 8 months ago
-
mooseymcman reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
nixhouseofcards liked this · 8 months ago
-
synthcin reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
atomicbritt reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
jackalopeisaac reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
jackalopeisaac liked this · 8 months ago
-
kranth-technoshaman reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
kranth-technoshaman liked this · 8 months ago
-
rayventhegm reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
kendermouse reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
sarcasticace reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
timeinhereyes reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
city-of-boners reblogged this · 8 months ago
-
accountnumerodos reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
afacetomeetthefaces reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
warriororb5 liked this · 9 months ago
-
notsogoofyjelly liked this · 9 months ago
-
autumnalhalcyon reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
villainouspotential reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
villainouspotential liked this · 9 months ago
-
terri104 liked this · 9 months ago
-
technicolorrelays reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
cloudcasterv reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
cloudcasterv liked this · 9 months ago
-
berix2010 reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
skeletons-with-hats liked this · 9 months ago
-
artmakerproductions liked this · 9 months ago
-
your-everyday-obsessionist reblogged this · 9 months ago
-
your-everyday-obsessionist liked this · 9 months ago
-
slashismodernhistoryfollowback liked this · 10 months ago
-
appurupai liked this · 10 months ago
More Posts from Nugget-creates-things








Monster High ship fankids to heal my inner child
‼️Don’t ship it: SCROLL ON‼️

This is how part three went, right?
How to Write Characters With Romantic Chemistry
Writing great chemistry can be challenging. If you’re not super inspired, sometimes the connection between your characters feels like it’s missing something.
Here are a few steps you can consider when you want to write some steamy romantic chemistry and can’t figure out what’s blocking your creativity.
1. Give the Love a Name
Tropes have a bad reputation, but they can be excellent tools when you’re planning or daydreaming about a story. Giving the romance a name also assigns a purpose, which takes care of half the hard plotting work.
You can always read about love tropes to get inspired and think about which might apply to the characters or plot points you have in mind, like:
Friends to lovers
Enemies to lovers
First love
The love triangle
Stuck together
Forbidden love
Multiple chance love
Fake lovers turned soulmates
There are tooooons of other tropes in the link above, but you get the idea. Name the love you’re writing about and it will feel more concrete in your brain.
2. Develop Your Characters
You should always spend time developing your characters individually, but it’s easy to skip this part. You might jump into writing the story because you have a scene idea. Then the romance feels flat.
The good news is you can always go back and make your characters more real. Give them each their own Word or Google doc and use character templates or questions to develop them.
You should remember to do this for every character involved in the relationship as well. Sometimes love happens between two people who live nearby and other times it happens by:
Being in a throuple
Being in a polyamorous relationship
Being the only one in love (the other person never finds out or doesn’t feel it back, ever)
There are so many other ways to experience love too. Don’t leave out anyone involved in the developing relationship or writing your story will feel like driving a car with only three inflated tires.
3. Give the Conversations Stakes
Whenever your characters get to talk, what’s at risk? This doesn’t have to always be something life changing or scary. Sometimes it might be one character risking how the other perceives them by revealing an interest or new fact about themselves.
What’s developing in each conversation? What’s being said through their body language? Are they learning if they share the same sense of humor or value the same foundational beliefs? Real-life conversations don’t always have a point, but they do in romantic stories.
4. Remember Body Language
Body language begins long before things get sexy between your characers (if they ever do). It’s their fingertips touching under the table, the missed glance at the bus stop, the casual shoulder bump while walking down the street.
It’s flushed cheeks, a jealous heart skipping a beat, being tongue tied because one character can’t admit their feelings yet.
If a scene or conversation feels lacking, analyze what your characters are saying through their body language. It could be the thing your scene is missing.
5. Add a Few Flaws
No love story is perfect, but that doesn’t mean your characters have to experience earth shattering pain either.
Make one laugh so hard that they snort and feel embarrassed so the other can say how much they love that person’s laugh. Make miscommunication happen so they can make up or take a break.
People grow through their flaws and mistakes. Relationships get stronger or weaker when they learn things that are different about them or that they don’t like about each other.
6. Create Intellectual Moments
When you’re getting to know someone, you bond over the things you’re both interested in. That’s also a key part of falling in love. Have your characters fall in intellectual love by sharing those activities, talking about their favorite subjects, or raving over their passions. They could even teach each other through this moment, which could make them fall harder in love.
7. Put Them in Public Moments
You learn a lot about someone when they’re around friends, acquaintances, and strangers. The chemistry between your characters may fall flat if they’re only ever around each other.
Write scenes so they’re around more people and get to learn who they are in public. They’ll learn crucial factors like the other person’s ambition, shyness, humor, confidence, and if they’re a social butterfly or wallflower.
Will those moments make your characters be proud to stand next to each other or will it reveal something that makes them second guess everything?
8. Use Your Senses
And of course, you can never forget to use sensory details when describing the physical reaction of chemistry. Whether they’re sharing a glance or jumping into bed, the reader feels the intensity of the moment through their five senses—taste, touch, sight, sound, and smell.
Characters also don’t have to have all five senses to be the protagonist or love interest in a romantic story. The number isn’t important—it’s how you use the ways your character interacts with the world.
-----
Anyone can write great romantic chemistry by structuring their love story with essential elements like these. Read more romance books or short stories too! You’ll learn as you read and write future relationships more effortlessly.





Redesigned/ redrew some old Ocs
Surprisingly, I never named them
What should their names be? 🤔