Other people: I have a fursona for the self-knowledge, to develop and express myself through fiction
Me: haha I love to put my fursona in funny and mildly embarrassing situations
π€ΈπΌ Warm-up for 2024, because β¨commissions will reopen soon!β¨ (January 4th 2024, stay tuned)
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ID: Colored drawing of an anthropomorphic fat rat, colored lilac and white, doing gymnastics - a big stretching! - near a mirror in the Enterprise-D workout room. She is wearing a lemon neon green headband and a silly bright violet and royal blue gym uniform. End ID.
π 2024 carrd | βοΈ Ko-fi π
Me: haha I love to put my fursona in funny and mildly embarrassing situations
π€ΈπΌ Warm-up for 2024, because β¨commissions will reopen soon!β¨ (January 4th 2024, stay tuned)
.
ID: Colored drawing of an anthropomorphic fat rat, colored lilac and white, doing gymnastics - a big stretching! - near a mirror in the Enterprise-D workout room. She is wearing a lemon neon green headband and a silly bright violet and royal blue gym uniform. End ID.
π 2024 carrd | βοΈ Ko-fi π
Category Artwork (Digital) / Fanart
Species Rat
Size 1280 x 960px
File Size 630.5 kB
Another fantastic tribute to a legendary series!
Love those angled futuristic surfaces of the wall to Pear's left!
As handsome and determined as Pear is in this picture, the concept for this picture is just stunningly cool:
hallways of mirrors are a dizzying optical effect, and when depicted, they expand the effective
space of the picture so much!
You could picture a room full of people in full volume, capturing every character from at least two angles!
This dance studio setup is also great for reference sheets, I bet!
Love those angled futuristic surfaces of the wall to Pear's left!
As handsome and determined as Pear is in this picture, the concept for this picture is just stunningly cool:
hallways of mirrors are a dizzying optical effect, and when depicted, they expand the effective
space of the picture so much!
You could picture a room full of people in full volume, capturing every character from at least two angles!
This dance studio setup is also great for reference sheets, I bet!
Haha, thank you! Well most of the scenery and effects are a tribute to the cheesy Star Trek aesthetics - TNG is not as campy as TOS, but still has it's gems! I'm not specialist on mirrors, so I'm pretty glad this one worked nice. And, yeah, it could be a great idea for a more experimental reference sheet!
You did a pretty solid job, for not being a specialist!
You may be friendly, cheerful and kind, but you are powerful badass when it comes to your creative abilities!
I think those sci-fi aesthetics could make real life architecture a lot more interesting and welcoming,
I'd much rather see hexagonal hallways with random velvety covers on the slanted walls,
techno pastel colors, geometric cutaways and random mirrory and glowing surfaces,
than the cold and inhospitable boxy tunnels we see everywhere in the cities.
Yeah, it'd be pricey, but people living in those spaces would be able to find some joy navigating streets and buildings.
You may be friendly, cheerful and kind, but you are powerful badass when it comes to your creative abilities!
I think those sci-fi aesthetics could make real life architecture a lot more interesting and welcoming,
I'd much rather see hexagonal hallways with random velvety covers on the slanted walls,
techno pastel colors, geometric cutaways and random mirrory and glowing surfaces,
than the cold and inhospitable boxy tunnels we see everywhere in the cities.
Yeah, it'd be pricey, but people living in those spaces would be able to find some joy navigating streets and buildings.
I LOVE alien architecture (hello Oscar Niemeyer). Some monuments in ex-Yugoslavia have this alien feeling too (Ilinden in Krusevo, I'm talking about you!). It's kinda magical, kinda weird.
And if "pricey" means "more people having a good job", I don't see a problem. Maybe a middle term - something affordable, but that makes community happy. Oh dreams, dreams!
And if "pricey" means "more people having a good job", I don't see a problem. Maybe a middle term - something affordable, but that makes community happy. Oh dreams, dreams!
Thank you for leading me to explore the breathtaking world of Niemeyer's designs!
Many of those buildings are more impressive than the CGI buildings from futuristic movies!
The Ilinden Monument is wonderful, too! I looks like a shell from a giant mollusk, or a dog chew toy!
I like this museum in Mexico City and The Bean in Chicago,
but I also love it when architects do cool stuff involving plants, turning cityscapes into actual concrete jungle!
Here's to eco-friendly and community-friendly architecture!
Many of those buildings are more impressive than the CGI buildings from futuristic movies!
The Ilinden Monument is wonderful, too! I looks like a shell from a giant mollusk, or a dog chew toy!
I like this museum in Mexico City and The Bean in Chicago,
but I also love it when architects do cool stuff involving plants, turning cityscapes into actual concrete jungle!
Here's to eco-friendly and community-friendly architecture!
Ooooo, I didn't know this museum in Mexico City, thank you! Mexico seems a fantastic place (my mom visited during the 80s and I grew with her histories.
And I love to call The Bean like that, just to annoy Anish Kappor (I'm clearly on Stuart Semple team XD)
And I loooove plants! Thank for for this link too!
And I love to call The Bean like that, just to annoy Anish Kappor (I'm clearly on Stuart Semple team XD)
And I loooove plants! Thank for for this link too!
My apologies! I didn't know about this Vantablack vs. The Pinkest Pink feud!
I don't know anything about the architects, I just like staring at their buildings.
Architecture that integrates vegetation into its design has been around forever,
but recently some people have started calling the concept "eco-brutalism",
meaning a rough-looking building with its structural elements jutting out,
but which are them smoothed by all the plants growing around the building.
At first it was a joke term, and now it's grown more popular.
Sadly, so far it's just a few novelty building around the world,
and this approach has some downsides (quicker dilapidation, difficult maintenance),
but it would awesome if we could all transition to these garden cities.
Well, the folks in the warmer climates, at least --
the only thing the people in the North can hope for is the evergreen fir-and-pine eco-brutalism.
I don't know anything about the architects, I just like staring at their buildings.
Architecture that integrates vegetation into its design has been around forever,
but recently some people have started calling the concept "eco-brutalism",
meaning a rough-looking building with its structural elements jutting out,
but which are them smoothed by all the plants growing around the building.
At first it was a joke term, and now it's grown more popular.
Sadly, so far it's just a few novelty building around the world,
and this approach has some downsides (quicker dilapidation, difficult maintenance),
but it would awesome if we could all transition to these garden cities.
Well, the folks in the warmer climates, at least --
the only thing the people in the North can hope for is the evergreen fir-and-pine eco-brutalism.
Hahah, no worries! Tbh I enjoy(ed?) Anish Kapoor art, I love bold optical effects, but. Man. Stuart Semple is a hero, and with grace and humor.
"Eco-brutalism" sounds quite good! And yeah, I can see that maintenance can be hard. In warmer climates yeah we can have plants all the time, but some places are too dry, or too humid (I can see humitidy making the durability of structures being a nightmare). And in the cold we can go for pines and annuals. More jobs for gardeners, I guess!
"Eco-brutalism" sounds quite good! And yeah, I can see that maintenance can be hard. In warmer climates yeah we can have plants all the time, but some places are too dry, or too humid (I can see humitidy making the durability of structures being a nightmare). And in the cold we can go for pines and annuals. More jobs for gardeners, I guess!
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