You are,<br>Your problem is that you looks for things wrong, other than all of the things that are right.<br>I guess people are right, you are your toughest critique.<br><br>Dreamy needs help.. professional help.<br>HAHAHA!
You are,<br>Your problem is that you looks for things wrong, other than all of the things that are right.<br>I guess people are right, you are your toughest critique.<br><br>Dreamy needs help.. professional help.<br>HAHAHA!
<span style="font-size:75"> I has professional help. xD We go to a family counselor.. And she wants me top be more assertive and stick up for myself and stuff. It's hard. xDDD<br><br>Museum, eh? O_o<br><br>Thanks!</span>
your doing good *s* its easy to see the progress as well <br><br>as for being critical, its healthy for an artist to be more critical to themself then others, not only are they then open to constructive critics cause they know its not perfect (perfect dont exsist) which help them to improve...the reason for being critical is that you mentaly is ahead of your developed skills and see what you want to improve yourself, which keeps you striving<br><br>i think the day an artist is fully happy with anything then they are about ready to quit because then they have no more field for improvement, once you mastered something then motivation can only keep up for so long...before you seek a new challenge<br><br>so in reality its ok to be critical, and quite healthy...and luckily with art as long as you can keep on top of it patience wise there is always room for improvement and expansion...at least there is more room for it then any one person can fill out in one lifetime <br><br>in the latest work, the type of it combined with level is ahead of me, so my inability to see the 'errors' dont mean they aint there just that dreamland is a better artist who exceled far ahead of me and others in here who dont see them, and because of that she have an eye for details yet to develop in those who dont see the errors <br><br>its not being too hard on herself though, its being realistic in finding her own room for improvement to keep her motivated to keep developing
<span style="font-size:75">Tanitsja: Thank you! That was extremely helpful! I never looked at it that way, and my thinking I'm horrible, I don't think I'll think it's true deep down. But I do understand it and it makes a buttload of sense. =3<br><br><br>I've been holding out on you guys. >3 <br><br><img src="http://i38.tinypic.com/2njv683.png" alt="http://i38.tinypic.com/2njv683.png" class="bb-image" /><br><br>Course, we had to keep it a surprise!<br></span>
go back and look at your very first art, look at all the minor mistaces, then sit down and really go back to how it felt creating that, while you saw the major mistaces how happy you likely was for even making that because at least you now was able to some degree to make your own sigs or whatnot...and the minor onces didnt even cross your mind<br><br>doing that is what made me realise how much i progressed since then, and that there is always room for improvement, and the more you improve the better the eye for details you get<br><br>its like my teachers used to say, before you can ask a question you got to know what you are asking about<br><br>like to take an overexagerated example, you cant ask who was the culpit of ww2, if you dont know there was a ww2<br><br>and the same go for all fields, you see more mistaces now because you have progressed, become better, and have a much more trained eye then before starting making art..because through making it, investigating and not just looking on the all over pic, but looking towards details to understand how to...you have educated yourself without probably really thinking about that being what you have done<br><br>and of course someone who is educated can ask 10 times more questions about something, then someone who aint educated...and the higher the education, the more questions you can ask <br><br>so its a positive not a negative, because its a proof of your progress
<span style="font-size:75">Thank you, once again Tanitsja! That is extremely helpful, and I found that I have improved quite a bit! <br><br><img src="http://i37.tinypic.com/2m34a6e.png" alt="http://i37.tinypic.com/2m34a6e.png" class="bb-image" /><br>Fanart/a gift tag for my friend on another site. =]<br>My second time doing pixel. =3 I still need some work, obviously.</span>
the blue lines extend into the medal or decoration on the headseat, aka the headset is too transparent, also probably would nicer if the headset was outlinded by faint lines as well<br><br>and due to the spoty shade coloration, it could pay out to shade around the blue lines inside the head (not the ones outlining), to make them less distinct<br><br>love the eyes (i am just starting to figure out eyes), and wish i could draw as well, what little drawing skill i had when younger i have lost probably due to stop doing it, and never was that good
<span style="font-size:75">The orange circle is a marking. =3 It's meant to be a ring around a horn on my fursona, but I didn't draw the horn, quite obviously. Haha. ^_^<br><br>Thank you, once again for your helpful critique!</span>
<span style="font-size:92">-grumbles-<br><br>I ish pushed to this art dump by Dreamers.<br><br>xD<br><br>o.o<br><br>I luffles the Detective Mod tag! ;D<br><br>Its ahhdorable :P</span>
<span style="font-size:75">Oh, like you didn't want to be. Psh. Actually, knowing you, all I did was make your momentum greater. >3<br><br>Thanks! =D</span>
ah ok you want to duplicate the layer behind the orange then, dye it orange, and erase all of the stuff that aint bellow the markings, so it really comes of as belonging there and not laying above the rest, because just spraying a color over another makes it seem when transparent like the lines and effects are black, instead of either blue or orange shading (originaly blue, should be orange after puting on the marking)
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Check out my new rescue program, soon to be up and ready!
Check out my new rescue program, soon to be up and ready!