A stag with the normal number of legs taking a drink from an icy lake
(actually a Eulophidae sp. wasp boy getting a sugar snacc while I snap a 100 pics of that rack đđ)
2/13/23. N. Florida
Such a good boy đ¤
I don't like the naked one
I rlly love your art! I like to draw too but I'm having trouble with chubby/fat characters. Is there any advice you could give? (Sorry if this is weird or annoying, if so you don't gotta answer it.)
I get this question a lot, and for once Iâm going to try to give a proper answer.Â
I what most people get wrong is how to distribute fat. People gain fat in different parts of their body, but no one gains fat in only one part. I often see people draw âfatâ characters by just drawing a skinny character and making their belly stick out, like in the picture below.
as you can see, the first drawing  looks kinda weird and unnatural, and it certainly does not look âfatâ. in the second drawing the fat distribution is more natural, with fat on the charactersâ sides and chest as well as the belly. if you want to get better at drawing fat you should practice adding fat to those areas, as well as the arms, face and neck. another thing that makes the first one look strange is how âhardâ the fat looks. thereâs a really visible border between the âskinnyâ part of the body and the âfatâ part. fat doesnât work the same way as muscle. fat is soft and doesnât have any strenght - meaning that unless you physically lift it up its going to hang and sag. a lot of people are afraid of drawing fat that looks fat - as in fat that bulges, sags and gathers in rolls. that is a shame, because you canât really skip that stuff if you want to draw natural looking fat.
like you see in the drawing above, adding rolls and visible sagging makes the fat look, well, fatter. all I can say is; donât be afraid of making your fat look like real fat!
I hope this helps anyone who's trying to design their oc using a wheelchair, it's not a complete guide but I tried my best! deffo do more research if you're writing them as a character
âI think a healer is someone who seeks to understand and not to judge and says, âthere, there, I know how dark it all feels for you right now, but you are doing fine⌠you are doing great⌠you will be okay, eventually.ââ
â juansen dizon
Image ID: an aerial shot of a countryside. There are several long, rectangular fields, all slightly different shades of green (probably because theyâre growing different plants). Theyâre lined with what appear to be hedges or possibly brambles and the occasional tree casting long shadows, some of which appear to be blooming pale flowers. In the center there is a field thatâs bright red that fades out in streaks. It almost looks like a streaky line of paint. /End ID
Poppies taking over a field in Poland - June 2013 by Kacper Kowalski, Panos Pictures
I've found this nifty reference website for artists called www.dimensions.com that has a database of exact measurements for various objects, plants, and animals
They have a premium version with 3D models that I haven't tried yet, but it's definitely very informative if you're trying to get the anatomy and proportions for different species of animals right!
Asian striped land leech, Haemadipsa guangchuanensis, Haemadipsidae
Photo 1 by dhfischer, 2-3 by daver, 4-5 by bentsai, and 6-7 by albertkang
Campeche spiny-tailed iguana
"Cachryx alfredschmidti"
Hi itâs me puddleorganism if youâre confused why you got a billion hoops from me
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