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offset circles on watercolor paper colored with Inktense pencils using watercolor brush to dilute
Sponsored by: Daisy Yellow Daily Paper Prompts
This ZIA prompt asked that ink be dropped from a dropper onto the page. Since I didn't have ink or a dropper, I decided to just use my watercolors. The drops were not intense enough, so I ended up getting a smaller brush an adding dibs and dabs of paint as the mood struck me. It was fun. I'm pretty pleased with the way this turned out. Let me know what you think. Thanks for viewing. Oh, I didn't use any additional color - only the original watercolor.
On the tag I put a print of a drawing I did a couple years ago..printed out from another bigger journal. Back then I was very sad and hibernating, and I wanted this page to say, "that girl is now getting out and seeing things!"
The last couple of weeks I have been working in a moleskine, not using much ephemera or tape, etc. I have been asking myself a lot of contemplative questions and find I have been doing a lot more writing then usual. Really it ebbs and flows, and I am already feeling the tide turning back to more artsy pages.
Regardless, this be.prompted was done in the more writing mode.... Read more about this spread on my blog post, be.prompted.1, by clicking HERE
DALL-E 2024 prompt:
The scene is set in a 16:9 widescreen format, within an atelier in an old, worn-down building. A white robot painter is in the center of the room, actively painting one of the younger models on a canvas. The models are standing along the right wall, both with long, messy black hair and worn clothes. This widescreen image captures both the models in the background and the white robot painter in the foreground, emphasizing the contrast between the rustic human element and the sleek mechanical nature of the robot. Atmospheric lighting highlights the textures of the old building and the subjects.
Prompts: Walk into a party, feelin' out of place Everyone's too cool, everyone's too fake I try to start a conversation, but I can't seem to relate --v 6.1
Song Inspiration: ✩ Explicit Content. ✩ TONES AND I - UR SO F**KING COOL"
Created with #midjourney #photoshop
Thank you for your visit, faves, and kind comments. 😊
© AI Art Legends 2022
I chose the galaxy theme adventure prompt and my jumping off point was that piece of blue paper in the middle of the layout. It's from Shimelle's Starshine collection and is of a galaxy. I also added other stars in paper and stickers. I'll be uploading my process video to YouTube later today if you're interested in seeing that - www.youtube.com/user/daybydaywith5/
Also, if you click over to my profile here in Flickr, I put photos of just the left and right pages on their own. That way you get a better look at all the elements. :)
Process video can be found at: youtu.be/KCuazfhZy6M
Nikon D3s + 24-70mm f/2.8G | PROMPT, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, Chile, 11 April 2011
© 2011 José Francisco Salgado, PhD
PROMPT's (Panchromatic Robotic Optical Monitoring and Polarimetry Telescopes) primary objective is rapid and simultaneous multiwavelength observations of gamma-ray burst afterglows, some when they are only tens of seconds old." [Source: Wikipedia]
Prompts: I wasn't born to be an angel I cut my feet along the road But it reminds me of the days where I was happy Playin' games with neighbours kids I hardly know And they say I was born to be a suspect I carry all the fault And it still bothers me the way I went about it But I had to leave, you know I had to go. --v 6.1
Song Inspiration: TONES AND I - I AM FREE"
Created with #midjourney #photoshop
Thank you for your visit, faves, and kind comments. 😊
© AI Art Legends 2022
Joe Mancuso of North (I recommend locating and acquiring "Drowning in Sky" promptly) bequeathed unto me a vinyl copy of Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon." I had been hunting for one to hang in the studio. DSOM hangs next to Asia's debut, with one of my favorite covers by Roger Dean. Joe gave me that one, as well. Thanks, Joe!
Also visible: A cover of the Styx album "Kilroy Was Here" signed by Dennis DeYoung, Ray Charles' "Hallelujah, I Love Her So!", and the Bears' debut album. What a mix! If you like a couple of these, you probably HATE a couple of the others. I just can't help myself. Whether it's considered corny or cool, I love it all.
I worked the stage at a Dennis DeYoung show in August, and got to hold the actual Roboto mask in own two hands. It's a bona fide icon of my youth and the region where I went to junior high and high school in north central Illinois. IL-based bands like REO Speedwagon, Billy Squier and Styx were mandatory listening. Unfortunately, so were Bon Jovi and Loverboy. ... well, full disclosure: I actually still have a soft spot for the Loverboy song "Get Lucky."
Cheap Trick was from just up the road in Rockford, so they were huge. I've got "Dream Police" in another frame. When I got my first moving violation and had to go to traffic court at city hall in Rockford, I remember that they had a framed platinum album of Dream Police on display in the lobby. That was definitely the only cool thing I encountered that day, but that's another story ...
Somewhere, I've got a photo from 2007 with Rick Nielsen looking very fabulous and half of my face next to his, looking like a very happy nerd. A couple of small but important pieces of my drum set were given to me by Bun E. Carlos, who is better than Santa Claus. For one thing, Bun E. has played on a lot more of my favorite songs. Who d' king of the whole wide world? Bun E. is.
It wasn't until I moved away to Champaign, IL that I had any inkling of indie rock or what wasn't being played by WYFE, the biggest AOR rock station in Rockford (a station which, at the very least, I owe a debt of gratitude for playing U2's "War" album like crazy when it was fresh). In Champaign, I got hooked on R.E.M., Elim Hall, 77s, Robyn Hitchcock, The Choir, Adrian Belew (and the Bears and King Crimson), Poster Children, Camper Van Beethoven, The Replacements, Hum, the Boomtown Rats, and lots of other great but even more obscure music. In addition to more popular stuff like David Bowie, the Clash and Midnight Oil ...
Through my time-consuming-but-fun avocation writing about music (in much more coherent fashion than this, typically), my tastes have skewed predominantly toward brilliant, lesser-known records (all-time favorite: "Laughing Stock" by Talk Talk. recent favorites: "Dig! Lazarus, Dig!" by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and "100 Days, 100 Nights" by Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings), but yeah ... I -will- still haul out that Asia album once in a while, and though its kind of hard to believe the conceptual hamminess of Kilroy came from fully grown men, you know what? It's still great campy fun, and there are some fine hooks on that album. "Domo arigato, Mr. Roboto." I wish I'd written it.
Having been prompted lightly by the delightful post by Zehavit_Lamasu that happened to include a pretty bit of crockery, my post today features a large sample of my plate collection!
Hard to photograph in a room lit primarily by fairy lights flickering; that's why there are hints of blue in some reflections where you wouldn't expect them! And this is an idiosyncracy of mine that you might well miss if you didn't eat here often or refrained from searching my cupboards! It's funny when you realise that something you take for granted is someone else's totally eccentric what the fuck, and our dinner plates sort of straddle the gap. I started buying plates from charity shops when I first lived by myself in a studio basement a couple of years ago; I had a particular aesthetic in mind, largely influenced by the cup and saucer sets my mum used to collect when I lived with her. I really enjoyed how she had lots of the same items but rendered in different ways; and I think when I started doing this I liked the idea of contrived disorder.
My handwriting is praised endlessly; 'it looks like computer writing' is by far the most annoying accolade, because of course being a child of the internet myself I am totally happy with the word 'font' to express that sentiment - why aren't more people?? I can believe you think I'm exaggerating but that's your prerogative. Most people never have to even think about the phrase computer writing. Anyway, my handwriting IS really great, but the principle on which I developed it is exactly this: contrived disorder! It works as a precept; aggravate the chaos in your actions to improve their overall uniformity and it will look consistent! My writing is influenced by the shapes used in graffiti and people comment on how well I write in straight lines - the trick is to make each letter NOT follow a given line, so that the eye picks out where order would lie, and the effect is perfect precision!
With the plates, it just sort of happened this way; I couldn't afford a proper set of crockery so I went to charity shops and found that if I bought strikingly variant designs that fitted to an internal aesthetic mean then I could have what I felt to be a perfectly functional 'matching set' for a portion of the price and always available for updating!
The really small plates are Puppy's food dishes, since it makes the kitchen look nicer than neon plastic food bowls getting kicked around! She drinks out of cut glass sugar bowls, also sourced from charity shops and deposited in each room.
What I like about having plates like this is that each meal tends to suit a particular size and depth of plate, and I have a huge range to choose from - so it's nearly always perfect, to my own Platonic ideal! It's hard to come up with a spec sheet for anyone else to contribute to the plate collection, because you can either see the ordered chaos or you can't; but my mum did buy me the plate on the top right that has the horse's head in the middle and she may have won at platequest, because the horse looks like one of my favourite ponies to ride as a child, Muna, plus it has a teal border, PLUS it has gold embellishments (and gold detailing on plates almost always wins - there is a lot more gold going on here than my camera can pick out for you!)
Tom has pointed out that this collecting is quite eccentric; when he did it was genuinely news to me! I'm slightly surprised that this isn't just what everyone does really; it certainly feels like the right thing to do.
Now back to Final Fantasy and Dark Souls!
Artwork created by Midjourney from a sequence of text.
Unexpected results using the Latin name (Desmodus rotundus) for the common vampire bat. rotundus is round in Latin so that probably explains the circular results.
CHATSWORTH - A prompt call to 9-1-1 from a passerby brought the Los Angeles City Fire Department and allied agencies to quickly conquer a small non-injury brush fire in the 11500 block of North Topanga Canyon Boulevard on September 29, 2020.
© Photo by Austin Gebhardt
LAFD Incident: 092920-0711
Connect with us: LAFD.ORG | News | Facebook | Instagram | Reddit | Twitter: @LAFD @LAFDtalk
Prompts for the community film-making workshop, with Ed Webb-Ingall, part of Open Cinema at Open School East. April 2015.
Strawberry Bokeh. Terri's gorgeous photo of her grapefruit bokeh made me want to try for some fruit bokeh of my own.
I struggled a bit with this one as I had no clear idea of what I'd do. In fact, I nearly started all over again but with a few additions, I think it looks okay now. Unfortunately, though, the tear drop does look rather like a onion! Lol! They make you cry though, don't they!
I used acrylic paints, pitt pens, white gel pens, gesso, chalk inks and stamps. I also cut out out the tear shape and stuck it on.
This prompt was a good reminder to take my focus off the ground or my phone when I walk, and look up. I get to see some amazing architectural feats when I’m downtown Louisville, and I tend to pass them off. This building is where I have my day job. The street right outside is covered by a glass ceiling – making it nice to enjoy the outdoors without getting rained on. Most times when I take a moment to look up, I’m pleasantly surprised. You should, too.