SLO

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago

I leave mine unplugged. It would be nice if they would turn off.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 9 months ago

It's all Science Magic to me. I am continuously thrilled that the world is filled with people who are much smarter and more curious than I am.

I'll sleep a little better knowing the quiet strip flickering under my aquarium isn't a ticking time-bomb though.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 9 months ago (7 children)

We have a VR system set up in our living room. I don't even want to talk about how long it took me to figure out the receivers were making a steady, high pitched noise. There are 4 of them and they are situated near the ceiling.

I hear it from a lot of things when it's quiet enough. Clock radios, tvs, monitors, my pugmill, heaters. There was a noisy power strip with a flashing one-off switch that I'm still convinced was going to kill someone.

I DON'T know anything about electricity - so mostly it makes me anxious that my house is going to burn down. I have bad enough hearing loss that I have to use closed captions on my TV - but it IS mostly because deep voices are extremely muddled. I'm surprised a bit by how many "not really" answers I see.

[–] [email protected] 15 points 9 months ago

Every day is a big deal. They aren't any less important if your re-walking them either. It's the act of trying that's important, not the days behind your belt. Fucking awesome!

 

Digital drawing of a skull.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

I guess I'm confused. No, the computer didn't trace anything. I traced the general outline of some flowers to create a rough draft before drawing the stencil for this tattoo.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago (2 children)

It's just a drawing program, not an AI program.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago (4 children)

The drawing program (Procreate) automatically screen records my drawing as I work on it.

 

A floral design I just finished in Procreate

 

I sat on the artwork for this one for almost a year with only a few drawings left to go. Publishing my first coloring book was rough - my family and friends were supportive, but to say it didn't sell well would be an understatement. My ego just couldn't take a second round so I shelved this one. Then spent 10 months pretending not to see the files on my desktop.

I finally gave up, finished the drawings and sent my files in to the publisher. I'm glad it's over. I was excited about this project when I started it and I'm disappointed that I let a bunch of sales algorithms get me so upset.

Remember that your art is more than it's 'like' count. Don't let numbers shit on your parade.

[–] [email protected] 21 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm an artist - I tattoo, do freelance illustration and produce handmade pottery. My husband is also a tattoo artist. My entire income is made through art.

I have stopped attempting to draw coloring books - AI "prompt artists" have taken over and are pumping out grayscale coloring books at extremely low prices. Not a high income producer for me in the first place, but the entire field is falling apart.

Tattooing is a different story - I use AI to produce references regularly. Not full drawings, just references I can use to create my own drawings. Pottery remains unchanged.

The obvious difference is the type of art. The further it moves from a drawing, the better the outcome when AI is involved from my POV.

To be honest though - how many of you actually have real artwork in your house? Not prints - actual handmade art. Art has been struggling for a long time now - it has little value to the average consumer. Mass production has made it a throwaway product. Most ceramics are made by machines now - vases and "paintings" and dishes are all isles in a home goods store, stamped out and inked by a machine. Most professional artists are employed by companies, not off selling their art. I don't really need to spell out what will happen when the company gets a hold of a free program to replace their artists.

There isn't a good outcome for artists here - consumers want cheap art. Companies want cheap artists. Artists want living wages and for a lot of us that means not making a living off of art already, because the wealthy class that has luxury money to spend on handmade and original art is shrinking as we speak.

At least - it is here in America.

 

Is it still mixed media if it's entirely digital at the end?

 

They need smoothing and trimming yet, but I'm pretty happy with them so far. Still not sure about the size, but I guess we'll see!

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

Good eye! I appreciate the feedback!

Giving my clients what they want is very important to my work. Grandma was quite the avid crocheter, but the artwork I drew up using the center... Stitched(?) Crochet work had a rather unfortunate resemblance to a butthole. Tattoos are permanent and memorial tattoos are very personal - it's more important to make them attractive and meaningful than factually correct. I would hate to have someone mention something like "hey that looks like a butthole!" thinking they were being funny and cause a client to feel embarrassed or upset about their work. It is hurtful to both their self image and their memories of the person they got the tattoo for.

 

The artwork I drew up for my husband's mother's memorial tattoo for her mother. Super excited to see it on skin!

 

From my flash sheet last month. I do a lot of drawing as part of my apprenticeship, but pre-made designs don't sell very well here. I'm glad she took this one though - it turned out cute.

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