Nostradamus'omh » 11 Jul 2023, 7:58 pm » wrote: ↑ You are suggesting I am being riled up, just keeping everything proportionately here, proportionately here. You get awfully one sided when I don't take sides.
The thing about an honest brain, it knows corrupted minds won't change their organized behavior since birth any generation forward.
Nostradamus'omh » 11 Jul 2023, 8:01 pm » wrote: ↑ The thing about an honest brain, it knows corrupted minds won't change their organized behavior since birth any generation forward.
Great theory and rotten philosophy as either way it is intellectually inaccurate as long as ancestries keep using it to justify their current social behavior at fighting over which typecast people inherit the earth next generation forward.DeplorablePatriot » 11 Jul 2023, 9:37 pm » wrote: ↑ Generations may go backwards when travelling through folded space.
A pencil drawing with some ink touch ups.sootedupCyndi » 09 Jul 2023, 11:51 am » wrote: ↑ deezer is a very interesting artist. he has a style like Van Gogh. really!
I empathize with depression 24/7. I have no sympathy for those that won't figure out why they are constantly depressed about their reality or humanity being so unfair.MackTheFinger » 13 Jul 2023, 2:18 am » wrote: ↑ NO !
I am having a bad bout of depression and my weeds are 6 ft high.
I don't care I just stay in.
My generations are folded. Much easier when traveling folded space.DeplorablePatriot » 11 Jul 2023, 9:37 pm » wrote: ↑ Generations may go backwards when travelling through folded space.
It is the common creases of evolving here now as specifically limited to time that make each unique and priceless, until reasonable doubt installs a sense of worthlessness cradle to grave on anyone not buying a social narrative believing eternity is beyond evolving forward now.Deezer Shoove » 13 Jul 2023, 5:52 am » wrote: ↑ My generations are folded. Much easier when traveling folded space.
They aren't worth as much though with the creases.
I like it! I don't think pencils are my fav either.DeezerShoove » 13 Jul 2023, 5:41 am » wrote: ↑ A pencil drawing with some ink touch ups.
Just trying out the colored pencils (not my favorite).
Almost threw it out. Friend pulled it out of the trash. Liked it I guess...
I have no sympathy for those geniuses who have failed and then write gibberish on message boards thinking they are Bob Dylan like. But don't seem to realize Bobcat understand every word he mixes up...he has been doing it for 60 years and gets new fans everyday. While the word zombies of message boards are pretty much shunned except by other nuts....who are also word zombies.Nostradamus'omh » 13 Jul 2023, 5:46 am » wrote: ↑ I have no sympathy for those that won't figure out why they are constantly depressed about their reality or humanity being so unfair.
I have never compared myself to Robert Allen ZimmermanMackTheFinger » 14 Jul 2023, 5:32 pm » wrote: ↑ I have no sympathy for those geniuses who have failed and then write gibberish on message boards thinking they are Bob Dylan like. But don't seem to realize Bobcat understand every word he mixes up...he has been doing it for 60 years and gets new fans everyday. While the word zombies of message boards are pretty much shunned except by other nuts....who are also word zombies.
It easy to figure why people are derepressed all the time...it has to with chemicals, transmitters, brain chemistry and a dozen other things that are not working as the body exactly intended.
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I love it!DeezerShoove » 13 Jul 2023, 5:41 am » wrote: ↑ A pencil drawing with some ink touch ups.
Just trying out the colored pencils (not my favorite).
Almost threw it out. Friend pulled it out of the trash. Liked it I guess...
I am sort of the same way. We budding artists see great works and it is a daunting field.DeplorablePatriot » 12 Aug 2023, 11:36 am » wrote: ↑ I love it!
Is that in wax pencil?
I'm into dabbling in acrylics. Or should I say, 'was" into it. Got bored with it and have been in an art slump for a few years now. I mostly think my work sucks. A few I actually like. My grandfather and father were accomplished artists who sold their work.
You're welcome. You have a great style, all your own.DeezerShoove » 12 Aug 2023, 7:15 pm » wrote: ↑ I am sort of the same way. We budding artists see great works and it is a daunting field.
At some point I want to try and accept it is merely my interpretation doled out with my limited talents. I feel much more liberated and less self-conscious. What people think isn't on my mind. I just let whatever I can do come out.
I'm sure your grandfather and father wouldn't dismiss your works or compare yours to theirs.
It would only be a low-self esteem asshole that would belittle a guy earnestly trying.
Thanks for the kind words.
I'm going to try acrylics next.DeplorablePatriot » 12 Aug 2023, 9:05 pm » wrote: ↑ You're welcome. You have a great style, all your own.
I truly believe that people who have a very early talent have a gift inherent in them. My granddaughter was about 5 years old when she developed an interest. She didn't show much promise initially. I taught her what little knowledge I knew...some basics of light, contrast, depth, shadowing, color compliments, dimension, shading, cool to warm colors, atmospheric perspective, etc.
She self-blossomed as an artist as early as high school, putting her own art teacher to shame. She's a sweet, unassuming kid, but he actually treated her with some slight disdain, most likely because her art far exceeded his ability. She kicked my *** in art from then on. I couldn't possibly match her work and imagination. She's now off to college with an art scholarship, and pursuing art and business degrees. Makes me proud. To make extra money before college, she would draw or paint portraits of people's pets, but she didn't charge nearly enough..."Oh, grandpa, $20.00 is enough."mg: She was so good, that she could capture the essence of the animals' personalities. She'd also developed tattoo art according to what someone was imagining, put it to paper, then they would buy it from her and off to the tattoo parlor they would go.
Cheers!
DP, I saw some of your chalkboard art work years ago, you have great detail on those vag’s you illustrated. We almost bought your Vicki’s Vulva drawing and Clara’s Clit along with Lorna’s Labe.DeplorablePatriot » 12 Aug 2023, 11:36 am » wrote: ↑ I love it!
Is that in wax pencil?
I'm into dabbling in acrylics. Or should I say, 'was" into it. Got bored with it and have been in an art slump for a few years now. I mostly think my work sucks. A few I actually like. My grandfather and father were accomplished artists who sold their work.
What? You must have been in the classes during the U of W days or BCC, when I assisted Spance Campbell and Professor Walt Traninit as an apprentice illustrator during their anatomy lectures. Small world. The minora tends to be the most difficult, as well as the intricacies of the bartholin gland and secretion routing.Makallbuks » 12 Aug 2023, 10:39 pm » wrote: ↑ DP, I saw some of your chalkboard art work years ago, you have great detail on those vag’s you illustrated. We almost bought your Vicki’s Vulva drawing and Clara’s Clit along with Lorna’s Labe.
Yes but your drawing of the enlarged urethras were extraordinary. It looks like you sold out if those.DeplorablePatriot » 13 Aug 2023, 11:54 am » wrote: ↑ What? You must have been in the classes during the U of W days or BCC, when I assisted Spance Campbell and Professor Walt Traninit as an apprentice illustrator during their anatomy lectures. Small world. The minora tends to be the most difficult, as well as the intricacies of the bartholin gland and secretion routing.