A few fanarts on post-it, all by Bénédicte Ciaravino, one of LoliRock’s main character designer ! :)
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#gid art #LoliRock #that chub Amaru thoMore you might like
PDFDrive stopped working a couple months ago, but you can try oceanofpdf.com instead.
So ya boi went off today
Hard agree with this one
YES ONG I HAD A FRIEND WHO WALKED
ACROSS A HIGHWAY
TO GET HOME FROM SCHOOL BECAUSE THEY HAD NO CAR I FUCKING HATE CARS
FUCK CARS
This seems like a wonderful opportunity to direct people at Not Just Bikes and Climate Town, two channels that touch a lot on why the above has happened, and the ways you can help fix it.
(Pssst, go to local town meetings! Especially when they’re planning on talking about zoning laws!)
Here’s one of each!
Western style dragons are profoundly mid to me, but i try to keep my trap shut about that because i don't want to be the no fun allowed guy for a very popular creature design. But i cannot contain my rage about spoon wings. I hate them so much. Nothing with a patagium looks like that or flies like that. It doesnt matter how many polygons your beast has, my immersion has been shattered by half of its flight surface being straight up gone
For the people wondering what spoon wings means. Flying animals with a patagium generally have a flight surface that goes down the side of their body to at LEAST the rear leg. This is to maximize surface area for lift and support the weight of the lower body during flight
whereas cgi dragons shooting for an aesthetic of realism are lucky to have a wing membrane that goes down past their ribcage, despite having much heavier legs and tails than the average flying vertebrate. Also there is a tendency to give them a disproportionately broad "hand" which is a wing ratio I've only seen in tiny insects.
I think the reason so many dragons are designed this way (besides cultural inertia) is because the people modeling and animating dragons find a longer patagium inconvenient, since it has a tendency to cover up parts of the animal outside of flight or get pulled around by body movement in ways that a spoon wing doesn't.
Anyways the point is I hate this design trope. I don't like to look at giant stupid wing hands on twiggy arms. I think it is uncooler than realistic wing ratios.
LOVE that we're coming up with names for specific dragon design fails. This is the right thing to do.
Other common dragon design features that are irrationally annoying:
Dragon Greebling: When a creature design is just...really...really.......really Textured in a way that defies logic, for no reason other than to make it look detailed and visually busy.
Chicken Arms: When the wing elbows are permanently bent at a 90 degree angle even when the wings are extended
Finger Elbows: When the elbows have an extra finger extending from them for some reason?
I'm not sure what to call this, but when the "fingers" of the wing extend waaay past the wing membrane
aka why this thing looks so Bad
This dragon from the "wizarding world" website has one of the worst wing designs i've seen in a while, with the wing membrane attaching to the upper arm
Yeah I have a lot of opinions about dragons.
I was mostly agreeing until you insulted the flight rising nocturnes (second to last picture) and now I’m deeply offended
Like, yes the “fingers” extend very long but it helps give them an interesting silhouette and ties into the way the design combines a lot of round and pointed shapes
I do think there’s an interesting conversation to be had about realism VS creative freedom VS ppl just blindly following artistic trends without analyzing them
Like, when you’re designing fantasy creatures an amount of adherence to real world physics helps avoid ridiculous looking spoon-wings or arms that are permanently bent for no reason
But sometimes it makes sense to go against the laws of physics when it works with the design
Bc good design work will oftentimes express things about the characters with the design. Like the dragon with the weird finger elbows(4th pic from the bottom), if you focus on it from a evolutionary standpoint it’s kinda dumb but in that picture with its posture it gives the picture a sort of regal energy, looking sort of like the back of a throne or a cape
I think the reason these images become problems is because like. When you’re defying the rules of general physics/evolution for an artistic reason it can be cool or interesting. But then people will just take those elements without understanding the function of them and combine them at random.
and you end up with something like the last dragon that looks like it shouldn’t be able to fly according to all know laws of aviation
TLDR: unrealistic designs like this can be okay if there’s an artistic purpose but oftentimes they look ridiculous because people use them without putting thought into it
On further thought, I find that I agree on this. I think the deal breaker for me is when the design lacks a unified and dynamic look that suggests how the dragon moves or (if animated) looks fluid and alive when moving, and generally just makes it seem like a living creature
Like this piece by Haskiens on DeviantArt
Like, sure, his wing membrane ends above his hip, but it's easy to see how his wings would extend and move
Zombie girl and ghost girl who bond over their shared interests and similarities and fall in love, only to later learn that they came from the same person who died
Kingdom Hearts: 358/2 Days
Don’t say that
I have never heard of Norman Rockwell. I don’t understand anything about art. But this picture shook me and caused a storm of emotions. It is called Breaking Home Ties, 1954
The boy is going to a Uni and wearing his best outfit; the Uni sticker is on his luggage, even his tie and his socks are the colours of the sticker. He is excited and impatient. The father - obviously a farmer, is sitting at the worn farm truck with a flag and a storm lamp, because their place is so small the train won’t normally stop there, so the father will need to “catch” the train and signal with the light and the flag for it to stop.
His son will never come back to the farm.
I think I understand why this picture sold at 15,4 million dollars in 2006.

Great paintings by Norman Rockwell of everyday Americana.
Norman Rockwell specialized in exactly this, OP. You can look at almost all of his paintings and find a story in it. Some are sweet, some are poignant, some just show family. They are all stories, and they all have story woven into every single detail.
And because it is my favorite, this is “Shiner”

Rockwell’s mentor was A.C. Leyendecker best known for his illustrations of the Arrow Collar shirt man. The model was Leyendecker’s lover. Rockwell was a pallbearer at Leyendecker’s funeral.
Rockwell’s paintings also dealt quite a bit with social issues as he got older and after the Saturday Evening Post made him remove a Black person from an image bc Black people “could only depicted in service jobs”.
As a result he left the Post & created (among other works) The Problem We All Live With and Murder in Mississippi.
and here i was thinking he was a bootlicker. Mr. Rockwell i am so sorry you are a true hero.
Tumblr Color Update
- Me: *logs on to Tumblr (dot) com*
- Tumblr: *BLACK THEME!!!!!*
- Me: Well, that's intense.
- Me:
- Me: Put the blue back!! Or at least let me choose the level of contrast I want!
For those who don't know: Ikumi Nakamura is the woman who was senior artist on Bayonetta, and designed the titular character along with Hideki Kamiya. Their greatest moment of bonding was over their insistence that Bayonetta keep her glasses on at all times.
Nakamura cannot go to horny jail. She is the warden.
Happy pride month to her and her exclusively
Wlw girlboss warden
























