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Wooh posted:This is super noobish but how does one thumbnail link. Does SA do it for you or do you have to do it manually? if you use waffleimages for hosting, it gives you a thumbnail link automatically
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# ? Mar 30, 2009 06:08 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 23:29 |
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Beat. posted:if you use waffleimages for hosting, it gives you a thumbnail link automatically Thanks. Guess I know who to use for hosting.
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# ? Mar 30, 2009 06:13 |
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I think my earlier question got lost in all the other posts, but I need to expand on it anyway. I need to do a website for someone who wants it to have a side menu where submenus fly/pop out to the side when you mouse over it. The only way I know to do that is some sort of CSS/javascript thing. (I've been trying to find a good program to make one with) But my boss insists we can't use javascript and that there's a way to do it in plain html. I haven't been able to find that way myself. Does anyone have any idea on alternatives, or am I out of luck?
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# ? Mar 30, 2009 13:27 |
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I have a Photoshop filters question, and it's entirely possible that this isn't doable. Is there a simple way to make a photo look like an 18th century painting? Obviously, I know that a filter is basically just going to give a rough idea, and then it'll need touching up from there, but I haven't been able to find anything all that close. I'm try to do something like a Trumbull painting, basically.
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# ? Mar 30, 2009 14:00 |
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Further clarification on the nudity issue: If you're concerned about nudity being an issue, it's probably an issue. A little warning in the title of the thread you make is great, as well as thumbnailing artistic nudes in a post of a thread that isn't yours (say one of the daily draw/paint/photo threads). If, for whatever reason you want feedback on your explorative Godzilla action figure bukakae guro series, tag a text link with surrounding smilies and brace for shunning and ridicule. Wooh posted:Thanks. Guess I know who to use for hosting.
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# ? Mar 30, 2009 17:11 |
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Is it okay in a piece of fiction to talk about another piece of fiction as long as you don't claim it as your own? For example, can I have my main character be a huge fan of, say, The Cosby Show, and have him constantly talk about how Cliff Huxtable is his role model and even have him emulate some of that character's mannerisms? I've been assuming that so long as I don't steal the character as my own and I've made the distinction that it is from another piece of well known fiction, then it's kosher to refer to fictional characters as fictional characters. Is this correct?
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# ? Mar 31, 2009 07:21 |
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Fantasmo posted:Is it okay in a piece of fiction to talk about another piece of fiction as long as you don't claim it as your own? Yep. People do it all the time. Similarly you can have your character buy a real product or talk to a real (notable) person, as long as you don't say anything libelous.
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# ? Mar 31, 2009 15:58 |
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Thank you, Slashie.
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# ? Mar 31, 2009 19:16 |
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Fantasmo posted:Thank you, Slashie. Is the Cosby guy an actual character you're writing? If so are you going to post that here?
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# ? Mar 31, 2009 22:53 |
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Slashie posted:Is the Cosby guy an actual character you're writing? If so are you going to post that here? No, sorry. The Cosby guy actually sounds like a funny premise, but that was just a random example. Specifically I'm talking about Godzilla. A character in a novella I've written is obsessed with Godzilla and talks about him a lot, and I was wondering if that could land me in some trouble with ToHo (they're the ones who sued that artist for using a tiny image of Godzilla in a collage but this is hardly the same thing).
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# ? Apr 1, 2009 06:02 |
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Fantasmo posted:No, sorry. The Cosby guy actually sounds like a funny premise, but that was just a random example. Specifically I'm talking about Godzilla. A character in a novella I've written is obsessed with Godzilla and talks about him a lot, and I was wondering if that could land me in some trouble with ToHo (they're the ones who sued that artist for using a tiny image of Godzilla in a collage but this is hardly the same thing).
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# ? Apr 1, 2009 06:46 |
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Okay, I have a question about trying to acquire a print of a portrait. The portrait in question is Francois-joseph Ducreux's 1793 self portrait with him pointing and laughing at the viewer. So far, I have not had any luck finding this available at any poster website. They all seem to only have other portraits he's painted, or his other self portrait (which shows him yawning). I have found one or two places to buy oil-on-canvas reprints of the portrait, as well as a site that has the portrait on t-shirts. I really want this awesome French bastard hanging on my wall though, but I'm not sure that I want to shell out $200+ for a canvas version. Anyone happen to know of a place where I could find it, or could direct me to a better place to ask? It would be much appreciated.
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# ? Apr 4, 2009 03:59 |
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If you can find a really high quality image of it online (at least 1,000 px on one side), you can probably get a decent print of it at any profession poster printer's. There are some in every town and they'll probably have a few different options. Basically you want a color printout on photo quality paper (at a size you like), and then maybe have it mounted on foamcore.
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# ? Apr 4, 2009 14:15 |
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I have been thinking, I would really like it if I could figure out a way to make the fonts in indesign work like the palette in that I could remove unused fonts. The best way that I can think of to do this is to deactivate the fonts. The problem that I am running up against is that, even though I am using an external font manager, suitcase fusion, I can't seem to deactivate anything that is already activated. What gives? Am I forever condemned to having papyrus and comic sans pollute my font menus? I am usix osx 10.5.6 by the by.
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# ? Apr 5, 2009 03:48 |
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I have a 50% off of any one item coupon for Michael's art store, good for this week only. Are there any particularly expensive art supplies I should be looking at to use this on? I'm a painter, and I have a cheap easel I like, but maybe I could use another one. Is there anything else anyone can think of?
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# ? Apr 6, 2009 20:47 |
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Commissar Lord posted:I have a Photoshop filters question, and it's entirely possible that this isn't doable. You can probably get a good way of the way there with hue and saturation adjustments, a texture overlay to suggest canvas texture, and some gradient shadowing. If you're going to use filters, keep them light, subtle, and minimal to keep it from looking too "filtery." I got some decent results with Noise/Dust and Scratches, but it's about playing around and finding what looks right.
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# ? Apr 6, 2009 21:47 |
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pipes! posted:A lot of painting mimicry is done without filters. I'm assuming you want to create something that looks like this? Cool, thanks. I'm pretty much a novice, but I thought this could be a fun project, and I"m sure I'll learn things.
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# ? Apr 6, 2009 21:58 |
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I don't really know the names of different art styles, but my next assignment is called something like formal expressionism, or abstract formalism, something like that. The examples the teacher showed me were mainly shapes and colors, but not crazy random patterns like a Jackson Pollack, you're supposed to plan it out before hand., and they looked to have more of a geometric structure to them. Does anyone know what I'm talking about? I wanted to find more examples of it.
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 04:47 |
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Elijya posted:I don't really know the names of different art styles, but my next assignment is called something like formal expressionism, or abstract formalism, something like that. The examples the teacher showed me were mainly shapes and colors, but not crazy random patterns like a Jackson Pollack, you're supposed to plan it out before hand., and they looked to have more of a geometric structure to them. Does anyone know what I'm talking about? I wanted to find more examples of it. Things like Rothko?
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 05:38 |
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plaguedoctor posted:Things like Rothko? ::does a google search:: Not quite, far more complex. In any one picture there might be tons of curves and circles and triangles and squares, all different colors. Elijya fucked around with this message at 05:56 on Apr 10, 2009 |
# ? Apr 10, 2009 05:51 |
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I guess I'm not quite sure what you're referring to, unless you mean stuff like Mondrian's work from the 20s and 30s. Do you have a time frame of when this movement was popular? I'm not very familiar with a lot of post-war art movements, so I don't really recognize the name you are giving. Unless you mean "abstract expressionism"? Though that encompasses a lot more than just geometric shapes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_Expressionism In any case, Soviet Suprematism is where it's at, and I won't be convinced otherwise.
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 06:52 |
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Hi everybody, I'm working in Dreamweaver designing (essentially) my first site and am attempting to have a image fade in over another image when I roll over it and then fade back out when I mouse out. I tried using the behavior effects to do this but they seem very buggy and almost never work like I want them to. Is there an easier way to do this?
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 07:08 |
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plaguedoctor posted:I guess I'm not quite sure what you're referring to, unless you mean stuff like Mondrian's work from the 20s and 30s. I whipped up a quickie example in MSPaint, it was more like this
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 08:35 |
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Elijya posted:I whipped up a quickie example in MSPaint, it was more like this Sorry, I'm kind of at a loss. The two names that really pop out for me are Picasso or Miro. You might try browsing through the Artchive and see if any of the names or terms stand out. The Pimpin Panda posted:Hi everybody, I'm working in Dreamweaver designing (essentially) my first site and am attempting to have a image fade in over another image when I roll over it and then fade back out when I mouse out. I tried using the behavior effects to do this but they seem very buggy and almost never work like I want them to. Is there an easier way to do this? Is your javascript disabled in any way? Do you have NoScript installed on Firefox? You could also do an image rollover using CSS, by having your image as a sized link with a background image that hides non-active portions, and then using the a:hover tag to move the image placement to show the mouseover state. Here's a very brief tutorial: http://www.tutorio.com/tutorial/pure-css-image-rollovers/ This was just the first result from googling "image rollover css", but I'm sure there are better tutorials out there.
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 08:46 |
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plaguedoctor posted:Sorry, I'm kind of at a loss. The two names that really pop out for me are Picasso or Miro. Hi, thanks a lot for the response. But to clear up, I wasn't having problems with just a rollover, the problem was I was trying to have the rollover image gradually fade in instead of just appearing. I got that figured out though so thanks. Haha the only problem is now my other javascript (lightbox) won't work.
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# ? Apr 10, 2009 19:08 |
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Did a couple Google searches, looked at the first page of this subforum, and would search if I could, but does anyone have any recommendations for metadata viewing plugins for Google Chrome (preferably) or Firefox?
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# ? Apr 12, 2009 04:16 |
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Are there any suggestions for DeviantArt-like sites for writing, that don't suck? Searching Yahoo Answers has brought up writing.com, indyfluency.com, chapteread.com, and fanstory.com, but before I sign up to four sites to check them all out I'd like to hear from anyone who knows about dedicated writing communities on the internet. EDIT: I may also post this in the resources thread once I get an answer. Thanks in advance! Son of Thunderbeast fucked around with this message at 01:21 on Apr 13, 2009 |
# ? Apr 13, 2009 00:24 |
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I've recently gotten really into pastels, I have a windsor and newton set that is very good, but the pastels are too large and soft. I keep getting raved at about how awesome nupastels are as hard pastels, (even by people in the UK), but they are impossible to get hold of over here. Is there anything roughly the same by european companies? I have some contes and misc. pastel pencils already but they are a bit too scratchy for what I want
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# ? Apr 20, 2009 11:00 |
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Son of Thunderbeast posted:Are there any suggestions for DeviantArt-like sites for writing, that don't suck? Zoetrope.com is the best for this. There are a lot of good reviewers, a lot of good writers, and even better, the editors of Zoetrope All-Story peruse the highly-rated stories. There are also requirements for critiquing (you must critique 5 pieces for every one you submit for criticism). Really, the best part is that not only will your pieces definitely get good critiques, but you can also see the work that your critics are churning out themselves. I've looked at a few of those sites, and they seemed to be pretty particularly bad. Stories that were objectively terrible (it's been a few months since I really looked into the writing forums, so hopefully I'm not trashing the wrong sites) and rife with crippling mechanical errors were getting rave reviews. It seemed like a big ego-rubbing festival... something that Zoetrope definitely is not.
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# ? Apr 21, 2009 21:56 |
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Impper posted:Zoetrope.com is the best for this. There are a lot of good reviewers, a lot of good writers, and even better, the editors of Zoetrope All-Story peruse the highly-rated stories. There are also requirements for critiquing (you must critique 5 pieces for every one you submit for criticism). Really, the best part is that not only will your pieces definitely get good critiques, but you can also see the work that your critics are churning out themselves. I've looked at a few of those sites, and they seemed to be pretty particularly bad. Stories that were objectively terrible (it's been a few months since I really looked into the writing forums, so hopefully I'm not trashing the wrong sites) and rife with crippling mechanical errors were getting rave reviews. It seemed like a big ego-rubbing festival... something that Zoetrope definitely is not. I decided I wanted to get back into writing recently and dusted off my DA account, but then was like "wait, what kinds of literature do they have here anyway" so I looked under Literature\Prose\Fiction, sorted by Popular of All Time, and found bullshit like this. Thanks again, I really appreciate that. Son of Thunderbeast fucked around with this message at 01:34 on Apr 22, 2009 |
# ? Apr 22, 2009 01:25 |
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Haha. I clicked the first one and thought, "This isn't too bad for a sixteen year old writer." Then I clicked the second one and, well,
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# ? Apr 22, 2009 01:43 |
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So, one of my friends and I are exchanging pictures. I've been trying to get into drawing, though it is difficult and I have only just begun. Anyway, I'm drawing them a picture of some ice skates. Here's what I did in my sketchbook: Click here for the full 800x600 image. Not really great, sorry for the cell pic, but you get the idea. I want to draw it for them on something larger, like 8.5x11" paper, however, I want something more "visible" and bold than pencil. Would I just use markers for this? Are there specific markers that would be good for this? I might want to fill in the skates with some sort of tan color. Hopefully this way it'll be visible if it's on the wall, whereas the sketchbook doesn't really matter since you're using pencil and it's like a few feet from your face.
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# ? Apr 22, 2009 04:44 |
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windwaker posted:Not really great, sorry for the cell pic, but you get the idea. I want to draw it for them on something larger, like 8.5x11" paper, however, I want something more "visible" and bold than pencil. Would I just use markers for this? Are there specific markers that would be good for this? I might want to fill in the skates with some sort of tan color. Hopefully this way it'll be visible if it's on the wall, whereas the sketchbook doesn't really matter since you're using pencil and it's like a few feet from your face. Sharpies might work well. Prismacolor markers and Copic markers are the top "professional" quality marker brands out there, but they're much more expensive as well. I think Copics run about 6 bucks a marker. In all honesty though, if you're just looking for a solid black outline I'd buy a pack of sharpies and go to town.
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# ? Apr 22, 2009 06:42 |
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windwaker posted:So, one of my friends and I are exchanging pictures. I've been trying to get into drawing, though it is difficult and I have only just begun. Get a brushpen! They have a flexible felt tip that can make more interesting lines than just a Sharpie. Faber Castell's PITT artist pen (make sure to get a brush tip, they have several varieties) is my favorite, and is only about $3. Microns are the standard for a fixed width small pen. They are also ~$3 each. I have three Microns (005, 03, and 08) and a PITT brushpen and I can honestly say that as far as B+W linework goes, that is all I need. (Although a 00 brush and a bottle of ink is fun too, as are Crowquil pens, as are sharpies, as are etc etc)
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# ? Apr 22, 2009 17:53 |
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Is there a free (ie non-watermarked trial version) pdf converter out there? I'm helping a friend with a cd cover and the format needs to be pdf or ai, all my stuff is bmps and jpegs. Thanks! VVVVVVV That's perfect, thanks! awkward saw fucked around with this message at 01:42 on Apr 27, 2009 |
# ? Apr 24, 2009 03:43 |
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awkward saw posted:Is there a free (ie non-watermarked trial version) pdf converter out there? I'm helping a friend with a cd cover and the format needs to be pdf or ai, all my stuff is bmps and jpegs. Thanks! I use and love CutePDF. It's so easy to use, just print the document and select CutePDF as the printer. It's not sophisticated of course, but it works well enough for my needs, I have no idea how sophisticated a PDF converter would need to be. But a quick Google search of "free pdf converter" comes up with quite a few results.
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# ? Apr 24, 2009 04:57 |
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What do you call two colours art ? I'm thinking of old school computer display aliased black and white, not shades of grey or anything like that. Can anyone point me to a gallery somewhere ? Artists ? Basically the kind of art I'm interested in is the sort of images you would see in old games for black and white computer displays. ok go etc fucked around with this message at 17:17 on Apr 24, 2009 |
# ? Apr 24, 2009 17:07 |
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ok go etc posted:What do you call two colours art ? I'm thinking of old school computer display aliased black and white, not shades of grey or anything like that. Can anyone point me to a gallery somewhere ? Artists ? Bitmap images are two color, although the pixels may be really close together to look greyscale... Net artists, and 8 bit artists are the first things to come to mind... Do you mean things like on https://www.mathwrath.com ?
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# ? Apr 24, 2009 22:28 |
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ok go etc posted:What do you call two colours art ? I'm thinking of old school computer display aliased black and white, not shades of grey or anything like that. Can anyone point me to a gallery somewhere ? Artists ? Duotone? Are you considering black to be a color as well? If you are looking for purely computer graphics stuff, the term you might be thinking of is "monochrome" (B&W, or green and black)
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# ? Apr 25, 2009 01:38 |
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# ? May 9, 2024 23:29 |
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I need to gesso some paper for an oil pastel and ink drawing I'm going to work on. I went to the art supply store and saw that white gesso primer is expensive as all hell. I do have some normal white primer paint in my garage though. Is there any real difference between the two?
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# ? Apr 29, 2009 21:35 |