
“Something that needs to be caged up so it wouldn’t fly away.”
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Representation matters!
Source (x)
That second to last one.. wow.
나는 봄이고 그대는 꽃이야
“I am spring, and you are the flower"
나는 복이 될지라
“I will become a blessing"
꽃이 피었습니다
“The flower has bloomed”
I laugh every time.
i am reblogging this again because this is the only video that makes me laugh hysterically through all the way to the end no matter how many times i watch it
this is it. this is the entire game.
I know im an art blog, but just watch this
Surreal Animal Sculptures by Ellen Jewett
Artist Ellen Jewett’s surreal animal sculptures are a reflection of her extensive background in anthropology, medical illustration, exotic animal care, and surprisingly stop-motion animation. Dream-like and unique, Jewett uses potentially toxic materials, such as paints, glazes and finishes to achieve her desired results. Much like nature, filled with imperfections and lethal traces, Jewett’s goal is to deliver a raw, earthy product: one with fingerprints and other small flaws. You can view more of her contemporary work on her Etsy shop.
im weirdly knowlagable in the history of soda i dont even drink soda why do i know so much about it
coke and pepsi taste different because coke was invent before refrigeration so it was designed to be drunk warm, while pepsi was designed after refrigeration was invented so it was designed to be drunk cold. as a result the tastes are different but if you drink pepsi cold and coke warm theyll taste the same.
Why the fuck do you know this
i honestly have no idea
coke’s recipe was originally green but the designers made it brown so it looked more like tea
Had they never seen green tea?
i dont even know if green tea was invented in 1886 but they wanted to make the public more open to eating the fizzy drink
Green tea was invented in the 13th century and made up 22% of the tea thrown off the ship in the Boston Tea Party
alan i know about soda not green tea
Paint-on-glass animation is a technique for making animated films by manipulating slow-drying oil-paints on sheets of glass as the animator gradually alters the shapes they create, and during this process, a camera records each finished ‘frame’.
When adapting ONE’s Mob Psycho 100, director Yuzuru Tachikawa wanted to adapt the source material in fantastic ways. And so, by combining the talents of a skilled staff, an anime with an incredible mix of animation techniques was born.
Mob Psycho’s ending, and a good deal of the paranormal scenes are a complex product of paint-on-glass animation, done by Miyo Sato, a Tokyo University of Arts graduate and animator who has had her work nominated for multiple international animation contests.