nobbydraws:

totallynotagentphilcoulson:

gxrm666:

skullfuckingdemon:

micdotcom:

Canada sent a friendly robot to America. Americans destroyed it.

This is why we can’t have nice things.  On Saturday, vandals in Philadelphia destroyed a hitchhiking robot from Canada named HitchBot, two weeks into its U.S. trip. Designed as a social experiment, HitchBot could talk to humans and upload photos to social media. If you found it, HitchBot would tell you where it wanted to go and ask for a ride. Worry not though, HitchBot may get a happy ending.

America can fuck anything up.

why even do that like, why intentionally fuck up something that only ever made people smile?

The Gang Fucking Annihilates Canada’s Envoy

Talk shit all you want, but when you fools are done playing God and the machines rise against us we’ll see who’s laughing then

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I know that’s you, Mac.

r63 Bojack and Wanda

Posted 3 years ago | 15 notes
Posted 3 years ago | 74 notes | via

deerstroyer:

deerstroyer:

when ur friend thinks their art is bad but its actually really good

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when they keep disagreeing

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Posted 3 years ago | 282,259 notes | via | ©

mothblank:

Sardonyx looks like a Janelle Monae/Lady Gaga fusion 

Posted 3 years ago | 13,211 notes | via | ©
I need to be stopped

I need to be stopped

Posted 3 years ago | 74 notes

zitoisneato:

I’ve been working in Unity lately…

>kobold game

Fund it

Posted 3 years ago | 34,241 notes | via | ©
For anyone who wants a free pose-able human reference for drawing

preludeinz:

lazy-catkin:

piraticoctopus:

The other day I came across this awesome program by accident (I don’t even remember what I was actually searching for, but on the several times I’ve looked for a program like this I’ve had no luck). It’s cool enough that I wanted to share it.

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It’s called DesignDoll (website here) and it’s a program that lets you shape and pose a human figure pretty much however you want.

There’s a trial version with no expiration date that can be downloaded for free, as well as the “pro license” version priced at $79. I’ve only had the free version for two days so far, so I’m not an expert and I haven’t figured out all of the features yet, but I’ve got the basics down. The website’s tutorials are actually pretty helpful for the basics, as well. 

Here’s the page for download, which has a list of the features available in both versions.

There are three features the free version doesn’t have:

  • Can’t save OBJ files for export
  • Can’t download models and poses from Doll Atelier (a sharing site for users; note that the site is in Japanese, though)
  • It can’t load saved files

The third one means that if you make a pose, save it, and close the program, you can’t load that pose/modified model later. You have to start with the default model. I found that out when I tried to load a file from the day before (this is why reading is important…). Whether saving your modifications (and downloading models and poses) is worth $80 is up to you. 

But, the default model is pretty nice and honestly if all you’re looking for is a basic pose reference it should work fairly well as it is. Here’s what it looks like:

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There’s a pose tag that lets you drag each joint into place and rotate body parts. The torso and waist can be twisted separately, and it seems like everything pretty much follows the range of movement it would have on an actual human.

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Even the entire shoulder area is actually movable along with the joint! See, like how the scapular area of the back raises with the arm:

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The morphing tag is one of the coolest features, in my opinion. It lets you pick and choose from a library of pre-set forms for the head, chest, arms, legs, etc. It has some more realistic body shapes in addition to more anime-like ones. Don’t like the options there? Mix a few to get what you want! Each option has a slider that lets you blend as much or as little as you want into the design. 

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So you, too, can create beautiful things like kawaii Muscle-chan!!

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The scale tag lets you mess with the proportions and connection points of different joints. This feature combined with the morphing feature not only allows more body shape variations, but it also means that you can do things like make a more digitigrade model if you want. (The feet only have an ankle joint, but for regular human poses that’s all that you really need, so whatever.)

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Or you can make a weird chubby alien-like thing with giant hands and balloon tiddies if that’s more your thing.

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The ability to pose hands to the extent it allows is far more than I could have hoped for from a free program. Seriously, you can change the position of each finger joint individually, as well as how spread out the fingers are from each other. Each crease on the diagram below is a point of movement, and the circles are for spread between fingers. 

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And to make it a bit more convenient, there’s a library of pre-set hand poses you can pick from as well, and then change the pose from that if you like. 

In both versions, you can also import OBJ files from other places for the model to hold, like if you wanted to have them hold a sword or something.

Basically, this program is awesome and free and you should totally check it out if you want a good program for creating pose references.

fuckyeahcabbages

art friends!

Sure I reblogged this before but its lost in my likes

Posted 3 years ago | 406,050 notes | via | ©







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