Comments: 39
Faelis-Skribblekitty In reply to Anatoliba [2015-05-31 19:54:11 +0000 UTC]
Kenn ich... Grundsätzlich kann ein Scanner niemals die wahre Qualität eines Bildes wiedergeben. Das ist einfach Fakt. :/
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Woodswallow In reply to Anatoliba [2015-05-27 14:05:03 +0000 UTC]
Ja, klingt echt danach als müsste man mal die Einstellungen prüfen.
Meine Rohscans sind oft zu rot und mega entsättigt...und Fotos sind zu blau -.-
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Anatoliba In reply to InkHyaena [2015-05-27 11:38:37 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much! I really enjoy drawing fur!
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Nichers [2015-05-24 13:06:46 +0000 UTC]
gaaaah that's so freaking adorable!! <333
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Anatoliba In reply to Nichers [2015-05-27 11:37:26 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! <3
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Redfennec [2015-05-23 20:45:08 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful! <3
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Anatoliba In reply to PineRain [2015-05-25 20:08:50 +0000 UTC]
Awww, thanks so much! <3
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UGNArtWorld [2015-05-23 17:16:55 +0000 UTC]
That's so adorable!
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Tsavoa In reply to Anatoliba [2019-04-23 03:54:44 +0000 UTC]
Awww! I love this. It's so special you spent so much time drawing hyenas, and you're an amazing artist. Your work reminds me, actually, of my late great-aunt Rhea's sculptures from my own clan. She used abstract forms instead of hyenas to illustrate the primality and universality of family. Rhea sculpted her own versions of mother and child. www.groundsforsculpture.org/Ar… Her forms were humanoid, but yes, this really extends beyond people.
My great-aunt, ironically, was the only one of her five sisters never to marry or have children of her own. She was the boldest in expressing her opinions, the most independent, and the most artistic. She switched to art full-time in retirement and thought of her sculptures, almost, as her children. She was also very warm to me - I still remember her wonderful art lessons - and very close to my grandma. When my grandma had outlived all her sisters and didn't remember, her first thought was, "Where's Rhea?" Then, after naming each of the others, "Where are all my sisters?" My grandma and her sisters, unusually for their generation, were sent to college. Their father said about that, "My daughters are as good as anyone else's sons." In their prime, they became wives, mothers, teachers, and office workers. But I can easily imagine them fighting a lion together as the leaders of a hyena clan. Or rather, I can imagine the leaders of a strong hyena clan as them. Rhea, the most fiercely and outspokenly feminist and probably the most perceptive about what lions were, would have led the attack. And if that lion even tried to lay a paw on her, my normally understated and un-athletic grandma would have gone all-out aggressive with her other sisters following. My grandpa, a Holocaust survivor turned engineer who maintained an unwavering optimism and love of life, would be distracting the lion from one angle with my mom in her adolescence, the idealistic editor-in-chief of her high school newspaper, doing the same thing from another. My cousins once removed would be somewhere in the fray. My uncle, already exploring other clans, would arrive late but would still join the attack. And that lion would be in real trouble.
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tigerskull [2015-05-23 15:20:43 +0000 UTC]
Das sieht so richtig schön idyllisch aus, so zufrieden wie die beide lächeln. Da möchte man sich glatt dazupacken^^
Ich mag die Übergänge der Schatten zu den helleren Stellen im speziellen an den Pfoten
Schön geworden
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nadairead [2015-05-23 15:12:21 +0000 UTC]
nice.
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CyborgLucario [2015-05-23 13:57:07 +0000 UTC]
How cute. :3
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SwanLullaby [2015-05-23 12:36:56 +0000 UTC]
Nice!
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