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moss-on-canvas · 4 days
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a comic about my characters, sao (longer hair) and robert (shorter hair). their mom is never home, so they survive by themselves. sao is begging sometimes, robert is working sometimes
sao is almost 11 here, robert is 13
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moss-on-canvas · 5 days
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Grandma's Face From the "Little Red Riding Hood" series
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moss-on-canvas · 1 month
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i can love
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moss-on-canvas · 2 months
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moss-on-canvas · 3 months
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moss-on-canvas · 3 months
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moss-on-canvas · 3 months
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Flesh prison
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moss-on-canvas · 4 months
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"I led them to each spot in order, explaining every detail. Upon their request, I demonstrated my methods on mannequins. It was amusing to see the youngster's struggle to hide his fear and disgust."
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moss-on-canvas · 7 months
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Goretober, day 1: blood
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moss-on-canvas · 10 months
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It can be figured out through chemistry! I barely understand it myself (so if y'all know more, please correct me), but that's what I found out. So, normal chemicals for b/w developing consist of several main components:
A thing that makes the picture appear (the developer) -- any chemical that reacts with photosensitive silver ions in the film and turns them into just silver metal. This chemical normally belongs to the class of phenols, which is basically any chemical with a funny hexagon and OH attached to it;
A thing that activates the reaction (the catalyst in the developer) -- for our reaction, it must be any basic chemical to change the pH;
A thing that doesn't allow the film to react on light again (the fixer) -- it dissolves those old silver ions from the film (that didn't react properly on the developing stage for some reason), but doesn't touch that silver we just made. It can be acidic or neutral, both are fine. There are some variations possible, but we know that water solutions of salts work.
So, knowing all that, our goal is to just find similar chemicals around us -- ideally, cheaper than the stuff in photo labs. We need any phenol, any base and some salty water. Luckily, it all can be found around us!
Lots of food contain phenols -- beer, red wine, tea, and coffee! We can also add citric acid to make the process faster;
For the base, any soda can be used. The process with washing soda will be faster than with baking soda, but both sort of work;
And our salt solution can be sea water or, yes, that salty water from your can of pickles! Other fixers contain Ammonium thiosulfate and, to replace it, some suggest using human urine, but I ain't going down that lane
I hope you learned something new today!
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Just scanned some bw film that I tortured four years ago. It was developed in instant coffee and fixed in pickle juice. This is horrible
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moss-on-canvas · 10 months
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Just scanned some bw film that I tortured four years ago. It was developed in instant coffee and fixed in pickle juice. This is horrible
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moss-on-canvas · 10 months
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Thank you!
At first I just wanted to avoid the obvious choice, but also  — I genuinely believe that this matches their dynamic better. It's the Joker who pushes Batman outside of certain safety, not vice versa. If Joker would stop his acts at some point, there would be no motive for Batman to bother Joker again (though I'm not saying he won't suffer because of that). They say that "the story is only as good as it's villain"  — because villains create that force that pushes protagonists towards new challenges, pain and growth. This is what makes Batjokes so engaging to me, and I'm celebrating it with shitposting
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I'm sobbing. It's better than I could expect
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moss-on-canvas · 10 months
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I see making art as a community effort towards a certain common goal. Each one of us gives our own enterpretation to what art means to us, and what ideas do we want to bring to the world. Every creation becomes a part of a bigger collective masterpiece, and it's beautiful. An artist asking to not take inspiration from their work is like a scientist asking to never cite or apply their research.
I'll see people literally say "don't take inspiration from my art/ocs" online (mostly on toyhouse) and I just wonder how we strayed so far from what art is? no art was created in a vacuum. all art was inspired by other art and all art will inspire others. art is a constant collaboration of everyone and everything, you cannot isolate your art from that collaboration unless you keep it private
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moss-on-canvas · 10 months
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moss-on-canvas · 11 months
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moss-on-canvas · 11 months
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Heat.
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moss-on-canvas · 11 months
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Prompt: make your killer character film their murder using one of those
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