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bluecapsicum 27 days
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Been a fan of yours p much since I joined the site a while ago (more than 5yrs ago). Just making sure you know about tumblr's new deal with two AI companies, Midjourney and OpenAI, because you can toggle in your settings to have your posts not be scraped for their datasets. Also wondering: Have you considered posting your work elsewhere? (Sorry to be the bearer of bad news; we're all in the same boat! 馃槩)
Hi! Thank you for the concern, and it's lovely to hear you've been enjoying my work for this long! I've toggled the option as soon as it was put in. It's all quite maddening, isn't it, and I've got no great hope that most of the platforms where I post my work haven't already been scraped when no one was looking. I'm looking into Nightshade, but that might have to wait until I've put in a bit more RAM into my laptop.
Regardless, I'm still on Twitter, Instagram, Bluesky and Mastodon, with varying degrees of presence, and all the links can be found on my website here.
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bluecapsicum 27 days
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bluecapsicum 28 days
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bluecapsicum 30 days
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Love your takes on the openings-into-the-blue-sky trope; a long-running favorite ever since Magritte :)
Thank you! Very kind of you to say.
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bluecapsicum 30 days
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You're so talented!! 馃挋
Thank you very much!
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bluecapsicum 30 days
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I made this comic back in July of 2020 after starting my daily meteorological fiction project in March of that year! I was never able to remember where I first read that phrase, but as far as I know, it should have been over 15 years ago. I think the way it was phrased was rather specific, but it also is a common piece of advice, which is why I didn't feel too bad basing my comic around it.
Honestly, the more people spread the sentiment, the better, and I still mean every word of this comic, maybe even more than when I made it.
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bluecapsicum 1 month
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i want to eat your art :3
Thank you very much, means a lot, the tasting menu is all yours!!
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bluecapsicum 1 month
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Cold winter skies聽illustrations for my daily meteorological fiction project, Reports From Unknown Places About Indescribable Events (Twitter,聽Instagram,聽Mastodon, archives on my website).
Keep reading for the companion texts.
December 31st: We report: sometimes, we think we know what to expect when it comes to the sky. We go a few days, maybe a couple of weeks without much happening, a rainbow perhaps, a contrail... We think we know the sky. It happens then, that the clouds twist and knit into impossibilities.
January 4th: We report: we went to the planetarium with our expert, once. We spent an hour watching as we got further, and further away from Earth, then the solar system, our galaxy, and then our galaxy group, until there was nowhere to go anymore. We got brought home, to our beating heart.
January 11th: We report: good morning, we would like to draw attention to a lovely and unexpected event occurring at this moment. Would you please look up to the clouds and notice how, though the sky is largely grey, the gulls flying overhead are tinted orange by the sunrise light? Thank you.
January 12th: We report: in the hollow of a valley, sleepy lightning bugs. There is grey little light dragging itself through the air like it does not want to be here, and we are cold with our hands in our pockets and our nose in our scarf and our ears exposed and bright red (nobody sees).
January 22nd: We report: we have missed a train today, but we can only hope that the train dearly missed us in return. We waited at the station for the next one for a long time, watched people get off and on different trains until it got too cold for us to wait outside. Wispy cirrus.
January 27th: We report on a winter morning: there was a robin and a few hares, blending in with the snowy grass. The snowflakes were heavy enough that we could hear them fall around us. We could smell the cold air until our nose started running. Grey sludge on the side of salted roads.
January 28th: We report: it is after nightfall, but there are still many sparrows chattering in the trees. The air is dank out here, and as we walk, we can feel condensation forming on our face, the white puffs of our breath dissolving into the night. Our expert walks a few steps behind us.
January 31st: We report sometime around sunrise (what sun, rising from where, one might ask on this cloudy morning). The light, weak and mournful, does not weigh enough to reach down the deep blue dark of the ocean. The sea, torn by the wind, is busy frothing and making everything capsize.
February 20th: We report: the barometer and the thermometer are both down. It rained a lot last night, and today, the waters are murky, agitated even through the advection fog. We cannot see the horizon. We picked up a nice, pearlescent seashell that glimmered in the sand amidst all the grey.
February 24th: We report: hares in the fields, then a partridge later. The mud is frozen, the clouds are thick. Not much wind. Some colza and daffodils blooming on the roadside. A little bit more of February, its low skies and its half-steps, the transitions in the light and the time.
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hello! i just saw your recent piece, i was wondering if you've read this comic, "Here" by Richard McQuire?
Hello! I have not read it, but looking it up, I had definitely seen a few panels around the Internet before. Very cool. I love this stuff. I'll have to read the graphic novel someday. I especially love the panels where it goes back very long ago or very far into the future. Also reminds me of A Ghost Story by David Lowery.
It's funny how those patterns emerge, I guess the human brain can't help but think about "this place, in another time". Can't help but live things through some kind of metatextuality.
Thanks for the question! I'll be thinking about it some more.
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