This is the other half of the 1st design, woo so that makes.... 1/2 of 1/3 of this project done! Yay
From Sketch to Final (?)
I think it looks pretty cool. Did this in around... 7 hours? Including some major procrastination breaks? Slammed most of it out in the evening though. This is about... 1/4 of 1/3 of a college project? sooo.... 14 more hours needed to complete this 3rd of the project? Roughly?
I'll probably post the rest as I do them, now that I'm posting this one, which'll be fun.
@kinkynafnaf you seemed interested in seeing this, and I don't *think* you know about this account yet.
Toodles!
*Edit, this was gonna go on my art account.......... Fml
So, there's a dirty little secret in indie publishing a lot of people won't tell you, and if you aren't aware of it, self-publishing feels even scarier than it actually is.
There's a subset of self-published indie authors who write a ludicrous number of books a year, we're talking double digit releases of full novels, and these folks make a lot of money telling you how you can do the same thing. A lot of them feature in breathless puff pieces about how "competitive" self-publishing is as an industry now.
A lot of these authors aren't being completely honest with you, though. They'll give you secrets for time management and plotting and outlining and marketing and what have you. But the way they're able to write, edit, and publish 10+ books a year, by and large, is that they're hiring ghostwriters.
They're using upwork or fiverr to find people to outline, draft, edit, and market their books. Most of them, presumably, do write some of their own stuff! But many "prolific" indie writers are absolutely using ghostwriters to speed up their process, get higher Amazon best-seller ratings, and, bluntly, make more money faster.
When you see some godawful puff piece floating around about how some indie writer is thinking about having to start using AI to "stay competitive in self-publishing", the part the journalist isn't telling you is that the 'indie writer' in question is planning to use AI instead of paying some guy on Upwork to do the drafting.
If you are writing your books the old fashioned way and are trying to build a readerbase who cares about your work, you don't need to use AI to 'stay competitive', because you're not competing with these people. You're playing an entirely different game.
If your tummy itches when you wear jeans, you have a nickel allergy and should paint the back of the buttion with nail polish. Okay I am going into the woods forever now. I love you.
I love animals that are, like, the opposite of cryptids: we know for a fact they exist and have a clear idea of what they look like because we have photographs and individual specimens, but we haven’t the faintest idea where they’re coming from - they just keep showing up out of nowhere, and the locations of their actual population centres are a complete mystery.
so fucked when i go to check the tumblr tag for the media i like and it's just kids and straight people in there like i need to speak to a transgender adult please can anybody hear me
I think it looks pretty cool. Did this in around... 7 hours? Including some major procrastination breaks? Slammed most of it out in the evening though. This is about... 1/4 of 1/3 of a college project? sooo.... 14 more hours needed to complete this 3rd of the project? Roughly?
I'll probably post the rest as I do them, now that I'm posting this one, which'll be fun.
@kinkynafnaf you seemed interested in seeing this, and I don't *think* you know about this account yet.
Toodles!
*Edit, this was gonna go on my art account.......... Fml
three internet trends i will (regrettably) probably never grow out of:
• typing in a cresCENDO TO EXPRESS EXCITEMENT
• …………..unnecessarily……. long……….. ellipsis’
• puttinfh a typo in eveyr other word to shwo u dont really give a fukc but u actually do