❤❤❤❤❤ @CathyCat: Thank you for sharing your 友チョコ🍫❤❤❤” manga….Your art style is super cute❤❤❤❤❤❤ Please make more manga works and..I LOVE YOUR LOLITA FASHIONS❤❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks for all the videos. Suggestion time! Japanese anime animators are masters of limited animation. An interview video with veteran japanese animators on limited animation theory would be awesome!
Could you possibly tell me the ink pens brand name please
@mattdoliver19842 ай бұрын
Wow, Amazing 👏🏼
@クルト-MAD2 ай бұрын
とんがり頭のゴン太やん
@sjjmu1112 ай бұрын
ですますの癖つよい
@readwrecks2 ай бұрын
Well, the thing is, a lot of trees grow branches at the same height on the trunk naturally, and they grow laterals out at the same spot on the branches. For many many trees, at least in North America, it is natural for them to have a symmetrical appearance among the lower branches. On higher branches, and distant ends of middle branches, the branches, laterals, and twigs can grow towards each other and they rub and collide when it’s windy which causes some of them to either break or get infected. So they fall off and create asymmetry further along the branch system. But these natural processes can be bad for the tree. Branches growing out at the same spot can stunt the growth of the tree and make it more like a bushe. So humans come along and prune them so that there is only one branch growing out at any given spot in order to get the tree to grow larger and have a thicker and more stable base, and keep them from injuring themselves in the wind. This is not a natural process. So it’s okay to have a tree appear “over-balanced” because you are essentially depicting a tree that has been shaped by humans.