Art Meme!!!

caenu:

imagine-your-oc:

Send a number + a character and I’ll draw them:

  1. In what they normally wear
  2. In what I’m currently wearing
  3. In a school uniform
  4. In swimwear
  5. In underwear
  6. With no clothes on
  7. In winter clothes
  8. In fancy clothes
  9. Making 3 different expressions
  10. Standing on their hands
  11. With their favorite animal
  12. Hanging out with a friend
  13. Sitting on the couch
  14. Doing something they don’t normally do
  15. Eating
  16. Playing a sport
  17. Beaten up
  18. As a kid/adult
  19. Wearing a funny hat
  20. Sleeping

mechanicalthorax:

soong-type-princess:

wesley-crusher:

cthulhupeelz:

trypophobic-canine:

somelikeitblue:

somelikeitblue:

With Halloween just around the corner, I’ve decided to post a link to a different place I buy costuming supplies every few days. SO! For those of you who would like to dress up as an elf for Halloween, check out Aradani Studios! 🙂

Also, if you would like me to share a specific link, shout it out. I’ll gladly tell you where I get my supplies!

http://www.aradanicostumes.com/elf_ears

Wooow. I go away for one day, and this post already has almost 4,000 notes. Apparently ears are popular! lol!

YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW MUCH I NEEDED THIS THANK YOU SO MUCH!

THIS IS WHERE I BOUGHT MY FAUN EARS

THEY’RE AWESOME!

space ears

For Halloween? Fuck that! I’m-a wear them everyday!!!

You. You all. People. Check this. This is marvelous. I am dying. I needed this.

curiousgeorgiana:

Stumbled across this really useful tool for anyone doing NaNoWriMo or planning any writing schedule—Pacemaker.

You can customize a variety of settings for your word count schedule—like writing significantly more on the weekends, or less, taking a few days off, or even generate a random daily word count target. Then you can display the schedule by calendar, graph, or table and share it with others.

Plus you can adjust the date range, so if you fall behind, it’s easy to update the word count plan and catch up.

Check it out here.

Do you have any advice for creative journaling? I know many writers enjoy having journals for creativity and I was wondering if you knew anything about how to go about starting a journal with plots, story ideas, etc as a writer and not just for personal journaling. Thanks so much and I love your blog!

nimblesnotebook:

Here.

I would also suggest:

  • Looking at my “prompts” and “inspiration” tags.
  • Recording your dreams and turning them into stories.
  • Free writing for one minute and then taking one phrase or line you like as something to use in a story.
  • Keeping a section reserved for recording short descriptions of your story ideas that you don’t want to forget.
  • Writing a journal entry from the perspective of one of your characters.
  • Writing a page filled with small notes as if your characters are writing to each other during class.
  • Turning the bottom corner of the entire journal into a flip book that illustrates one of your character’s story arcs (if you’re like me it’ll be with stick figures).
  • Maps of worlds, islands, countries, towns, or even just your character’s room.
  • Maybe color coding with ink to differentiate between pages that hold plots, characters, lines of dialogue, prose, etc.
  • Keeping track of character motives.
  • Write out plots in a visual manner, with names in different colors, phrases that describe a plot twist in stylized letters taking up a whole page, adjectives being written/drawn as the thing they’re describing (red being written in red, sharp being written with sharp letters, furry being written with letters that look fuzzy/furry, etc.), underlining important phrases, and doing anything else that makes it “pop” or that emphasizes certain points or moods.
  • Don’t fix grammar or spelling mistakes right away. Instead, go back and edit with a different colored pen when you’re done writing on that page to get some editing practice.
  • Try writing out plots as if one of your characters has read your book and must summarize it. This is practice for seeing what, to your character, are the most important parts of the story.
  • Keeping a list of names you might want to use later, along with their meanings if that is important to you.

ancwritingresources:

Resource: Writing Evil

So you’re writing your villain, the ultimate “bad guy,” the antagonist. Whether you’ve had experience with the world’s evil or not, an antagonist is a must in any story (though “evil” and “antagonist” do have separate meanings). Before you write the baddest bad guy to ever bad, remember that a critical teacher, a political rival, and even nature can present just as much of a contrast to your protagonist as a raging sociopath. Often “too evil” can present far more of a problem than “not evil enough” because the villain, bad as they might be, should still be human. Here are some guides I hope will help in writing believable (but still scary) bad guys:

General:

Often, in hopes of making the scariest villain possible, writers jump to the “insane” to psychopaths and sociopaths, anyone who stands outside of “the social norm.” It should be noted, however, that a very small percentage of sociopaths or psychopaths are violent or participate in criminal behavior. But in case this is the route you choose to go down (which can be written excellently as well), here are some more resources: 

Psychopath Vs. Sociopath Vs. Apathy
How to Write a Sociopath: 
Violence
Whether your antagonist is the most evil person alive or simply doesn’t see eye to eye with your protagonist, the most important thing to remember is to make sure he/she/other contrasts fully with your main character. They must create an obstacle, a road block, must present complications to your main character’s goal; but don’t forget to give them their own story as well. No one, not even the bad guy, should be two-dimensional.