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i made a recipe illustration with a few alterations from this post! the bread turned out a little doughy, but i think if the portions were doubled it might have a bit more rise 🍞
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Tumblr Tuesday: The Otherworld

Scopic Impulse (@scopicimpulse)
Oh look, nothing makes sense anymore. The rules of physics need not apply.

Narcym Noesis (@narcym-noesis)
Is it a portal into another dimension? Is it a full-length mirror for mermaids? Is it rising out of the water, or sinking into it? I guess we’ll never know.

Formicalage ( @formicalage)
Oh hi there, cute green island, maybe I’ll visit sometim—oh, wait, what’s that unwholesome darkness? Nope. Nope nope nope nope.

Cinema Gorgeous (@cinemagorgeous)
Oooh I like my city art dank and eerie like it’s 2019. How many people are we looking at here that we can’t see?
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Just a reminder. Say it louder for the people in the back.
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newtscamander-s-fantasticbastard:
Hercules is the most visually creative of the Disney Reneissance films. If not any Disney film ever.
The three Fates sharing an eye.

Hades’ flaming hair.

The various designs of the mythological monsters and titans.

The diverse faces and body types of all the minor characters.

It’s a very visually engaging movie.
How could I forget the Underworld

And the opening sequence

Y’all need to get off Walter Disney’s cock
Jeez, I just said the movie looks nice. No need to get antsy.
Also like, pretty sure WD didn’t make that movie. It was the effort of various animators who sometimes get overlooked because we don’t see them WORKING on it for so many days, just the two hour long result.
Pretty sure that Walt Disney didn’t work on Hercules since it came out decades after he died.
Fun fact! The reason Hercules has such a unique style is because Musker and Clements brought illustrater Gerald Scarfe (famous for his work on Pink Floyd’s The Wall) to be the conceptual character artist. His original character designs are wild




Hey kids, did you know that you can be critical of a company and acknowledge how shitty it is in its business practices, and appreciate that it produces a lot of good art, much of which is created by artists and animators who have nothing whatsoever to do with the aforementioned shitty business practices?
Fucking wild that you can do that.
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The works of South Korean hyperrealist painter Joongwon Jeong, a freelance illustrator who studied Design and Visual Communication at Hongik University of Art & Design in Seoul. Via





