blue diamond and her blue pearl :^)
ojovivo
will byers stan first human second

Discoholic đŞŠ

â
Claire Keane

titsay
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă
Cosmic Funnies

Origami Around
Game of Thrones Daily

oozey mess

izzy's playlists!
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

shark vs the universe

Andulka

JBB: An Artblog!
trying on a metaphor

Janaina Medeiros
d e v o n

seen from United States

seen from Brazil

seen from France
seen from Sweden

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Sweden

seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia

seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from United States

seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from India
@joybarthory
blue diamond and her blue pearl :^)

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Interview with Iain McCaig
Youâve spent a big part of your career at Lucasfilm, creating some of the most iconic characters and costumes of the last few decades, including Darth Maul and Queen Amidala. Whatâs it like seeing a design youâve put down on paper fully realized on the big screen and a part of the cultural landscape?
Actually, Iâve been working as an artist for over 35 years now, only 9 or 10 of which were for Lucasfilm. I originally started in Animation on Sesame Street cartoons, then began my on-going life as an Illustrator (which continues to this day). I got into film 25 years ago via Industrial Light and Magic, but moved on shortly after to JAK Films (George Lucasâ personal Art Department up at Skywalker Ranch). In between working on Georgeâs new Star Wars films, I freelanced for many other directors and franchises, including Interview With The Vampire, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Francis Ford Coppolaâs Dracula, and recently for Marvelâs The Avengers and Guardians of the Galaxy and Jon Favreauâs live-action The Jungle Book. I came back to Lucasfilm a couple of years ago to help out on J J Abramsâ Star Wars: The Force Awakens and to Art Direct a little on Warcraft, before returning to the freelance world. Iâve had a parallel 25 year career as a screenwriter, too, and recently as author as well. In between, I wander the land teaching folk how to draw and tell stories.
How does it feel to see my designs out in the world? Â Very much like it feels to be a father: you kind of remember having something to do with creating this remarkable thing, but now that itâs out there and has a life of its own, all you can do is sit back and watch in amazement.
If youâll permit a brief fan geek out â could you talk about the design process for Darth Maul? For many, heâs the standout character of the prequel trilogy. What was your inspiration for that design?
Darth Maul was one of those characters that catches the wind and rises high. Â I can take credit for coming up with the original design, but kudos to George Lucas for inventing him in the first place, and hats-off to make-up maestro Nick Dudman for turning my stiffened black feathers into horns, which cemented the devilish icon. Â And of course, a standing ovation to Ray Park for his dynamic (and cheeky) performance.
As for how the design came about, all I knew about Maul originally was that he was to be the new Sith Lord, so stupidly I tried to out-helmet Darth Vader, only to discover (duh) thereâs no beating Ralph McQuarrieâs original design. Â Finally the penny dropped and I took the helmet off and started to explore the face underneath, drawing the portraits of various colleagues and carving them into icons of evil. At which pointâfinallyâthe script turned up; alas, all it really said was: âDarth Maul, a vision from your worst nightmareâ.
Fortunately, at the time I was haunted by a nightmare of a dead-white face with metal teeth pressed against my rain-spattered studio window. I drew a stylized version of that and presented it to George at our next meeting. George shuddered and passed it back to me; âGive me your second worst nightmareâ he said. And thatâs when the second penny dropped: my nightmarish peeping tom didnât fit because he was too ârealâ, and Star Wars, as everyone knows, is mythology. (Oh yes it is. When does it take place? âA long long time agoâŚâ).  So I reached inside for my worst mythological nightmare, which is clowns (a bad experience at age three with a Bozo the clown billboard. Donât ask). As Iâd run out of colleagueâs faces by then, I used my own, adding black marks to echo the muscle patterns underneath the flesh and turning his skin red because in nature black and red mean âDonât F**k With Meâ. And voilaâa new Sith Lord was born!
When youâre first briefed on a project, whatâs your artistic process look like when youâre trying to get to the core essence of a design? Do you have a tried and true method that you stick to or is it different with every project?
First and foremost, any design â whether itâs a character or a creature or an environmentâis there to serve the STORY. Â So I take my lead from the words â or, as happens more and more these days â from a treatment or even just a verbal pitch (and in lieu of that, from stories that I make up to fill the void). After that, I go through a very tried and true three-step process:
Step One: draw the image from you imagination, trying to capture all the pzazz and power you can;
Step Two: if there was anything in the image that lacks authority, find it in real life and study it in as many drawings as it takes to sock it away into your memory; then,
Step Three: combine Step One and Step Two into a Third drawing, one that combines the power of your imagination with the precision of your studies. Â Then hide Steps One and Two so everyone thinks youâre a frickinâ genius.
What has been the most rewarding project youâve worked on within the studio system? Conversely, what has been your most rewarding project outside of the studio?
Iâm not a fan of ranking experiences â the honor of drawing and writing and telling stories for a living is pretty amazing, no matter what it is.  Working with George [Lucas] on Star Wars: Episode One was a very special experience because he gave us four or five years to design everything â an almost unheard of amount of time for a live-action art department â and because George has great respect for artists and a wealth of knowledge of art and illustration. Working with Jon Favreau on his live-action Jungle Book was a treat too â Jungle Book is the first film I ever saw in the movie theatre, and Jon is always a pleasure. And then there was Francis Ford CoppolaâŚI could go on, but basically, itâs all been pretty fun, both inside and outside the Studio system.
In addition to being an art director, concept artist and illustrator, youâre also an author, producer and director. Do you find that these pursuits influence the others? Do you find yourself putting on, say, your âdirectorâ hat or your âproducerâ hat while youâre tackling a concept design project?
Art Directing, Concept Art, Illustrating, Writing, Producing, DirectingâŚtheyâre all parts that collaborate to tell a story, just as brushes and paint and canvas and so on combine to make a picture. I like the Writer/Artist part bestâitâs the closest to standing up and telling the tale around the fire (which Iâm fond of, too).  As for putting on a Producer hat when Concept Designingâif you mean, do I ever design to the budget?âthe answer is no, and yes: I believe in designing for the needs of the Story first, then figuring out how the heck to pull it off without losing your vision or your shirt.
What techniques or advice could you share with artists looking to keep their skills sharp?
Donât just hand your talents over to someone else to direct! Â Keep a sketchbook and work on your own projects, whether those are illustrated books or movies or graphic novels or games or art books or whatever â do your own thing, so you never lose contact with who you are and how you see things, which is the one true unique thing you have to offer the world.
What artists currently working in the industry do you look up to?
I respect and admire so many artists in the Entertainment Industry, and just as many outside it too. Â But âlook up toâ implies a kind of ranking system, and I donât do that. A long long time ago, I used to worship Frank Frazetta, James Bama, and Norman Rockwell and always had their images plastered to my drawing board. Then one day, I put them all away, because I realized the real inspiration wasnât in their pictures â it was in the weird wide wondrous world around me. All the amazing things I see in my colleaguesâ work are just reflections of real life too, and I celebrate every time I see it.
Last question â in the perfect world, whatâs your dream project?
The next one.
Images courtesy of Iain McCaig.
IAIN McCAIG is an internationally recognized and award winning artist and one of the motion picture industryâs leading conceptual designers. His exceptional command of human anatomy, character, emotional expression and visual narrative make him on of the most sought after artists working in the entertainment industry today.
Bohemique Demi Couture spring 2013
Teen Titans/ Teen Titans Go! parallels  | Robstar closing the door.
Nailed it.
can we just discuss how the colorists forgot to color starfireâs top purple in the second gif
So that means starfire stood infront of robins door with her tits out and robin was like âhmm i got to do this thing firstâ and closes the door on her
Truly he is Batmanâs disciple.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Itâs toughâŚshe is tougher.
My limited edition print run of this piece, âHaematopoeitic Transpirationâ is available now through Black Dragon Press! Nicolas Delort has been putting together a series of art prints based around certain themes and Iâm honored to be a part of it (be sure to check out Dadu Shinâs incredible piece also on the same theme)
To find out more about purchasing a print or more details overall go to the Black Dragon Press website at http://www.blackdragonpress.co.uk
Just a quick note, there are still some of these left and Black Dragon Press will be closing down their shipping room tomorrow for the holidays so if you wanted to order one before the end of 2015 nowâs the time!
(And as always I have other prints available on INPRNT as well HERE)
NW Collection 2 Patches by Sean Tulgetske Follow us on Instagram @graphicdesignblg
HAND LETTERING COLLECTION 2015 by Spensers Family

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Nobody cares if you donât go to the party by Maxime Bolis
So I offered to detail my process out to a fellow artist buddy. I included all my failures and decisions. You learn from your mistakes, maybe you will learn from mine. My eye is not the best with color, so I still cheat a lot, siiiigh. Learning more all the time, getting better.
This piece took maybe 3 âłworkâ days total. Itâs super messy (NO JUDGEY!) since it was a personal piece, and I was laying down enough for myself to understand. Thanks Izzy and Jason for your feedback!
I didnât proof read it, so DEAL WITH ALL THE GRAMMAR MISTAKES AND MISSPELLS.. I may fix later, but this took longer than expected. It took exactly the amount of time it took me to listen through the entire Skyrim soundtrack on youtube.
Hope you get something out of this.
You can view more of my work at www.kristinawayte.comÂ
You can follow my Tumblr! Or Artstation!  yeeeeeeee
Marceline the Vampire Queen (Stakes Pt. 1) - title card
designed and painted by Joy Ang
premieres Monday, November 16th at 8/7c on Cartoon Network
The first two episodes of the big Marceline mini-series premiere tonight. Part the first, âMarceline the Vampire Queen,â was written and storyboarded by Jesse Moynihan & Ako Castuera. Itâs going to be quite the event.
Escritos anĂłnimos
Lo preguntare una sola vez y despuĂŠs todo volverĂĄ a la normalidad.
ÂżEstĂĄs enamorado?
Si es asĂ, lo sabre todo y entenderĂŠ. Porque a la persona que amĂŠ, la amĂŠ libre. Y libre es como te amo. Y con amar me refiero a verte feliz, sea con la persona que elijas. Solo necesito esa respuesta para saber como sentirme. AsĂ sabrĂŠ que debo continuar.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Monotriz by Savia Design&Brand / Lucas Falcão / Lucas Bacic
DESIGN OVERDOSE
Facebook | Instagram