I strongly advise looking for fold/clothes tutorials, unfortunately on pinterest, or on deviantart (tumblr/google/everywhere else). There are tons and tons of useful tutorials that explain everything perfectly. Check @grizandnorm’s tutorials [x][x] very simple and easy to follow. Check this tut [x] by Louie del Carmen, here’s a nice tut [x] by juliaim15
on deviantart. Look for some more (even in my faq is one…) and use references, draw from life, try to understand why all those folds do what they do 🙂
rant under the cut (it has nothing to do with the ask btw xD)
Dad kept hiding pine nuts in the pages of this magazine and letting Edgar root around for them.
(Edgar cannot be released to the wild due to an injury. He now works as an ambassador bird and general household nuisance.)
Edgar has added to his vocalizations since I last saw him! He used to only say “oh wow” in a really sarcastic voice and to mimic the trill of a screech owl. Now he also screams “WHAT?!” and mumbles “what a WHOPPER!”
It was hysterically funny discussing politics with him in the room. We’d mention some new scandal and he’d randomly interject with cries of astonishment.
The Retromini (Retro mini) is a handheld console which can play GB, GBC, GBA and NES Games. At only 103. grams with the battery, it is lightweight and extremely portable.
Bundling 36 Games into one convenient player that fits in your pocket, with the potential to hold hundreds more games with its MicroSD slot. It is an ideal choice for entertainment on-the-go. You can find the Retro Mini HERE!
chipo chung as dido in the royal shakespeare company’s 2017 production of christopher malowe’s dido, queen of carthage
Aeneas, describing Troy’s fall, talks of “Young infants swimming in their parents’ blood” and says: “We saw Cassandra sprawling in the streets.” Meanwhile Dido, foreshadowing Dr Faustus, says of Aeneas: “He’ll make me immortal with a kiss.” Edith Hall makes a fine point in the programme when she notes that Marlowe does not call his play Dido and Aeneas but gives the queen the title. Chipo Chung plays her with a volatility and sense of contradiction that anticipates Shakespeare’s Cleopatra. Chung brings out all of Dido’s rhapsodic fervour for Aeneas but is at her best in the great speech where she is torn between sabotaging his ships to prevent his departure and expressing her undying love. (from this review in the guardian)