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Ko biết nó là cái màu quái quỷ gì nữa @.@
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hôm qua đi sn vui quá đi mất, kkkkkkk xD
Nhưng lúc nào đi cũng bị đám trong lớp chọc thế này chắc teo đời :<
anw, tính mê trai của mình lại nổi dậy :))
- Cái couple mình yêu nhất Kpop =)))))
Đọc xong cái fic của 2 bạn ý mà cảm xúc dâng trào cho nên des chả ra hồn :-<
- Art cũ rồi nhaaaaa :(
Vì mình vừa ngồi del hết đống art hồi còn là Newbie :(
Một phần là mình cũng muốn xóa đi những gì của quá khứ đen tối ngày nào *flashback* =))
Tiếc rẻ cái art nên up lại :3 Đằng nào thì nó cũng là cái ưng nhất trong tất cả những art cũ :v
not exactly sure what nature is graphing, however here is nature's version of a pie graph.
photograph of a rock in the Noosa Heads National Park, Queensland.
Roughly 8 x 10.5 inches. All sorts of paper from book covers, book insides, yearbooks, brochures, and so on. Lots of graphite.
L'ombrelle correspond avec la toiture . La lanterne correspond avec la fenetre du restaurant chez Agnès a coté . Le soir lorsque la pièce est éclairée la lanterne s'allume .
NOM DU GRAFFEUR . DENGJU .
There were some nice Aurora on this night, but there was also a good amount of fog that ruined the best parts of the show - bright purple Auroras! The fog is neat in some parts of the video, but it ruined the time stack.
The time slice version (seen above) turned out pretty interesting. I's like a bar graph. Since this image is made with lots of thin vertical slices (546 to be exact) it shows time on the horizontal axis (to make it a little more confusing, this was put together starting on the right side, so time moves right to left - the first frame of the timelapse is the slice on the right side of the image, and the last frame of the timelapse is the slice on the left) The darker gray bars are when the fog was the densest, blocking out more of the light. The brighter yellow-white bars are from cars passing. (I was shooting pretty close to the road on the edge of a field) I was also near some train tracks, and that's what the red bars are - the fog reflecting the rail road crossing lights. And of course, the green and purple parts are the Aurora Borealis.