Sans is very stupid, he doesn't have enough determination to take initiatives, but this time he has made an effort. Perhaps the thinking of seeing Frisk in all white, full of beautiful flowers and saying sweet words was an encouragement of some kind...
(Omg I discovered that this one was very similar to @venelona s comic today lol I think I read the old comic and it inspired me to do a version with classic Frans)
||REBLOGS GREATLY APPRECIATED|| Hello everyone, from now until the foreseeable future I will be donating all proceeds from my Etsy shop to @/careforgaza on Twitter!
>> https://www.etsy.com/shop/sevvrael <<
This includes these Spirk, Elisabeth Das Musical, and Mozart Das Musical prints:
man,, deviantart really did turn into a site of just. AI trash.
half my follow recommendations are AI adopt accounts or people churning out other bot-generated garbage under the guise of “original art”. i hate having to go in and do a pseudo background check for skill development/history and account age for every artist whose work piques my interest. i hate having to guess if the person’s a scam artist or if they just happened to start posting to deviantart because of some other thing like a site collapsing.
I just had a really funny thought that i will obv never act on but like. yk how if you draw more varied body types, you might get people in your dms or comments saying that this art made them appreciate their body. what if we started doing the opposite at artists who only draw thin bodies. “Just want to let you know I have one of your prints and it makes me hate my body ♥”
Yeah, thanks DeviantArt. Way to show off and rub it in our faces that using AI image generation earns a lot of money through questionable means. Bravo, bravo.
I have something REVOLUTIONARY to show all Elisabeth das musical fans, I managed to upscale some photos of Uwe's 1992 Tod online and LOOK HOW GOOD THEY TURNED OUT OMG
Here are both versions of each photo for comparison purposes:
Portrait of Maria with Her White Cat
By Jeff Stanford, 2023
Buy prints at:
https://jeff-stanford.pixels.com/
Inspired by the painting “Lady with an Ermine” attributed to the Italian Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci as well as the photography by Irving Penn.
Irving Penn was born in 1917 in Plainfield, New Jersey. I was born there in 1955. He attended the Philadelphia Museum School of Industrial Arts from 1934–38. In 1964 the school became the Philadelphia College of Art, where I majored in Photography and film from 1977-81. It is now named University of the Arts.