Behold i did a thing
Not Amanda
2,121,566 people are not Amanda and counting!
We’ll find you Amanda.
(source)
Reblog to give your followers choccy milk
Day 21 new hair style
@spacebunprince
3: gender swap
Day 3!! Pt 1
So far so good whooo!
@spacebunprince.
Day 25!, Avatars no energy again today heh, but heres two messy sketches one of Oliver Banks and one of Annabelle
Once again this is @emerald-emerlad s prompt list
I am making a new thing! Drawcember! you draw for each day untill christmas!
1.Chocolate
2.Gingerbread
3.Tasty
4.Jolly
5.Reindeer
6.Snowball fight
7. KRAMPUS
8. Snow
9. Ice
10.Mythical
11. Fairy
12. Santa
13.Sweater
14.Stocking
15.Night
16. Sled
17. Celebration
18. Rain (not everyone Experiences snow!)
19. Cold
20. Jack frost
21. Hot cocoa
22.Song
23. Lights
24. Walking in a winter wonderland
25. Christmas!!!!
Have fun if you are gonna do it!
People who i think would like this: @goldendeerschemer @simplelittlepaperyanon
Day 15 with a freinds oc! This is merci my frenid tae.bubble.tea on Instas oc
@spacebunprince
Things you’ll need:
Brown craft foam
Aluminum foil
Clothes iron
Ironing board
Black paint
Brown paint (lighter than your foam)
Paint brush
Paper towel
Grab some aluminum foil and crumble it into a ball. Not too tight of a ball though! The next step is almost impossible if you do.
Next, un-crumple the ball. Flatten it out into one layer. It’s fine if there are a few holes.
Place it on top of your foam.
Take your iron and firmly press it on the foam and aluminum. My iron was set to 3 (polyester) but the correct temperature may be different for other irons. Just remember not to use steam! Before doing this on a large piece, be sure to experiment and figure out what the best temperature and what the best pressure is. On larger pieces, you’ll have to move the aluminum around a lot. It’s not a quick process.
Now you’ve got this crinkly affect on the foam. Next is painting!
Grab you’re brush, black paint, and a dish with some water. The idea is to dilute the black paint enough so that when you apply it the paint will seep into the divets the aluminum created.
Once the watery paint is applied, wipe it off with a paper towel. Continue to do this for your whole piece of foam.
Now here’s an optional step (of which I haven’t done myself but I’ve known others who have):
Grab the light brown paint and, without diluting it, paint it on. It’s best to use a coarse brush in this case and to try to keep it out of the divets. Wipe some of the paint off.
Remember, imperfections are always good! Uneven paint isn’t necessarily bad so just experiment with it.
Here’s an example of a bracer I did with this method. The first two pictures are an example of the foam I began with and the rest show the end result. I hope this helps you guys out!
kill me, pete