usersdeino's profileDeino's comment board
 
display   entriescommentsthumbs
  displaying 441-450 of 958 — pages:   ← previous« 1 ... 4041424344454647484950 ... 96 »next →
Public Boards/Intermediate 
HunterKiller_ (Apr 16, 2006)
It never comes out quite like how you pictured it.
9 comments – latest 4:
Sweetcell (Apr 17, 2006)
Took me a while to see what this is, now that I do, wow. Pastels definately. Or Markers. Good one HK.
gerbear (Apr 19, 2006)
REally like this. Does have a Georgia O'Keefe feel. She is one of my fav artists of all time. She lived in New Mexico when she was old and painted lotsa skulls and bones. Her work is semi abstract. Hope you look her up. :)
IkariIreuL (edited Oct 15, 2006)
This one is so beautiful.
One of the views that I had was a tatto with the horns out.
And this recalls me of RedDragon and blake_great_red_dragon
sincity (Oct 15, 2006)
nice stuff. :}
drawn in 36 min with Oekaki Shi-Painter
davincipoppalag (Aug 7, 2006)
From a great photo by timeodd at DA http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/37521425/
21 comments – latest 4:
Aaaah >_< pink sky! wonderful!!
davincipoppalag (Aug 23, 2006)
Thanks all of you, too...
shining_star_sam (Sep 9, 2006)
Love the sky <3 very perdiful
Cameo (Oct 15, 2006)
Talent.....Talent......Talent! This is soo beautiful! Keep up the good work.
drawn in 1 hour 21 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Public Boards/Beginner 
Miss_DJ (Sep 11, 2006)
for my fun and amusement
7 comments – latest 4:
Sweetcell (Sep 13, 2006)
This one is really striking. It reminds me of thin tin that was cut in spirals and curled the way you do with paper. I could see this in a gallery.

Tin sculptures by MissDJ.
Miss_DJ (Sep 13, 2006)
thank you very much!
DMV (Sep 14, 2006)
This is very interesting :) I always seem to come back to this drawing.
Miss_DJ (Oct 14, 2006)
what a nice thing to say DMV! thank you.
drawn in 1 hour 6 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Axil62 (Oct 10, 2006)
There is this commercial here for the Bel-Rae institute, it's a veterinary school, and the commercial is a series of pictures of animals that they saved along with a voice over that describes what that particular animal was saved from, for example they show an iguana and the voice over says "..and this one swallowed a coin collection" then they show a dog "...and this one was shot in the face" So on and so forth. So I thought I'd do one that they forgot about.
7 comments – latest 4:
101_Torchic_101 (Oct 10, 2006)
XD lmao.
Sweetcell (Oct 10, 2006)
And wasn't even thanked later. Damn men.

Sorry, was continuing the theme. Hilarious.
kejoco (Oct 12, 2006)
haha...his ass is swollen, or is it shaved for access?
drawn in 17 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Public Boards/Advanced 
emmamommalag (Jan 2, 2006)
from a photo ref.. Ocean City, NJ
40 comments – latest 4:
emmamommalag (Sep 13, 2006)
Thank you, Helena. :)
Sweetcell (Sep 14, 2006)
Yet another one I forgot to comment on. That water is so amazing you can hear the surf. I'm guessing that shadow is a mountain or cliff? Really stunning emma.
Deino (Sep 14, 2006)
Oh. My. God. Gorgeous...
TammyF (Oct 11, 2006)
Absolutely breathtaking!!! Sooooo much depth!!!!! The more I look, the more amazing this piece becomes!! Excellent work!!!
drawn in 3 hours 28 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Public Boards/Intermediate 
DeadlyBlondeArcher (Sep 20, 2006)
can be good guys, too.

I copied the following text from a newspaper clipping I found in a photo album at my Mammy's (grandmother's) ranch. I scanned the actual article and was going to put a link to it here, but some of the text was not legible, so I just typed the whole danged thing. :)

If I understand correctly, The Wylie brothers were my Mammy's grandfather and great uncle, the little boy mentioned in the story was her Daddy's brother. This took place during the "range wars" in Texas. I had heard of this "cattle rustler/gunfighter", but had never seen anything written on him till this... I think it's interesting and I don't care if you don't think so. :)

Palo Pinto County Star, Thursday, January 22, 1981, p. 9

An excerpt from:
Vanishing Texas
By CL Yarbrough

A Texas Gunfighter

He touched the chords of history seldom and lightly, leaving few clear impressions on his turbulent passage through life.

His legend, held in trust only by the sons and grandsons of those he served, has grown dim. James Highsaw came with his parents and brother to Eastland County, Texas, about 1855. By 1860, Indian depredations had all but emptied that frontier country and the Highsaws moved back a few miles into Erath County. The family name was perpetuated there by Highsaw Cove and Highsaw Creek.

The Wylie Brothers, prominent Texas cattlemen, got their start in Erath County, and the Highsaws went to work for their neighbors.

After the Civil War, organized mobs, started to combat Reconstruction government and the hated state police, gained control of several Texas counties. As happened with many another such organization, the actions of the mobs were often diverted to personal vendettas and to arbitrary, violent enforcement of right by might.

Many decent men who had at first subscribed to the mob disassociated themselves, and many others, more cautious or better able to forecast the future, never joined at all. As time passed, some of these men openly opposed mob rule. Highsaw had not stolen, robbed or done anything else except be a passionate young man of his violent times. Yet, he found himself headed west to the safety of New Mexico, then a haven for hundreds of men wanted in Texas.

Many of these wanted men were real outlaws, and Highsaw thus entered into an association with the worst kind of people. A Hamilton County historian, writing sometime after the facts, called him “as unholy a thug as ever wrote a chapter in Texas criminology.”

The Wylies, highly respected in a dozen or more Texas counties, didn’t think so. They regarded Highsaw as a friend and as a valuable ally. When their ranching interests spread to the Pecos River country, rustlers were so bold that they took several herds away from Wylie cowboys in broad daylight.

The Wylies sent for Jim Highsaw.

Highsaw knew the people who were doing the rustling: He had been living among them.

When the next herd was taken, he, at the head of a small army of cowboys, caught up with the rustlers. Being acquainted, neither side immediately fired on the other. The rustler leader suggested that they kill a beef and discuss the matter over fresh steaks. The plan was, apparently, that the man designated by the rustler leader to shoot the beef would swing the rifle around and kill Highsaw instead. Highsaw, however, saw the gun start around to his quarter, was able to draw his pistol and get the first shot which was fatal to the rustler.

The Wylies were anti-mob, but they were careful and diplomatic. Young Jim Highsaw, on the other hand, was strongly influenced by the views of his employers and he was fiercely protective of those views.

When the Witcher and Clary families in neighboring Hamilton County demonstrated their defiance of the mob, Highsaw was one of several young men attracted to their style. The Witchers and Clarys found a place in history as outlaws, but a great many important facts are missing: they may have been guilty of nothing more than opposition to the mob.

Be that as it may, Jim Highsaw was one of a half-dozen men with James Witcher, Adam Witcher and Bill Clary when they attacked a church in Hamilton on the night of September 21, 1872.

The meeting inside the church that Saturday night may or may not have been for religious purposes: it was the wrong time of year for revivals, but the assumption since has been that it was religious, and no investigation of the question has ever been made.

It was afterwards reported that Clary and the Witchers wanted to kill at least two of the men inside the church, but no one recorded their reason. It is difficult now to condemn their actions except to say that they apparently started a gunfight in a situation that could have proved fatal to innocent bystanders.

They fired about fifteen shots into the church, and those inside fired perhaps ten shots back at them. Only Adam Witcher was hit in the exchange, and his wound was not serious.

The Witchers and two unidentified associates were captured and placed in the Hamilton County jail. On the following Thursday, the mob rode into town, overpowered the guard, and shot both Witchers to death. The body of the younger Witcher, Adam, showed the signs of personal hatred; it was shot seven times, while only one shot was used to kill James Witcher.

Jim Highsaw was now an outlaw. He had not previously killed, but when he killed two thieves a short time later, and threw their bodies into the Pecos Canyon, the stories that made the rounds made it seem that he had killed numerous men.

The indictment against him in Hamilton County, and his growing reputation as a gunfighter, made Jim Highsaw a wanted man who could never afterwards remain in one place more than a few weeks at a time. He drifted, and the Wylies lost contact with him.

Dick Wylie, a small boy on his father’s Erath County ranch in the 1890’s, had never seen Jim Highsaw, but he had been raised on the Highsaw legend.

One day, an old, tired-looking man wearing a brace of heavy pistols appeared in the Wylie yard. Dick, peering around the corner of the house, thought at first that he must be a lawman. His father seemed almost joyous to see the man, and invited him into the house, where he told his awed family that here was Jim Highsaw, come home at last.

Dick ran under a table in fear. Highsaw unbuckled his pistols and laid them aside. Then he pulled Dick gently from under the table and assured him that he had nothing to fear.

The visitor had not been there long when three riders appeared at the Wylie gate, where they stopped and seemed uncertain of their actions. Jim Highsaw, without speaking, put his pistols on again.

Dick Wylie’s father went out and talked with them for a few minutes, then came back into the house and sadly told Highsaw that it was the Erath County sheriff and two deputies. They were trailing Highsaw, but they didn’t want to close in on him while he was in the Wylie home.

Highsaw quietly said that he would ride out the back way so there would be no trouble on Wylie land.

Dick Wylie was never certain, but it looked to him like his father had tears in h is eyes as Jim Highsaw rode away toward the northwest. He was never seen or heard of again.




17 comments – latest 4:
Gigandas (edited Sep 27, 2006)
Every time I see this, I wanna squint. Thanks for hurting my eyes DBA :P...

-It's like driving around 6pm, sun is right in my eyes
DeadlyBlondeArcher (Sep 27, 2006)
You're very welcome... :)..."Riding off into the sunset" is rather blinding around here.
Sweetcell (Sep 28, 2006)
You see, another one I thought I commented on and didn't.

It's beautiful, the sun and the reflections and the warm tones, just lovely. But what get's me is if you go from every version, 1 down to 5 it looks like a sunrise caught with progressive snaps of the camera. In V1 the sun is just peaking at the horizon, and as you click gradually on 2, 3, 4, it shows the sun getting higher and stronger till you get to 5. It's an amazing thing to see and I wondered if you'd meant to paint it that way. Astunner Cindy, one of my favorites of yours.
Deino (Oct 3, 2006)
I'm drooling. That should say it all.

(Beautiful, beautiful use of colors!!)
drawn in 4 hours 32 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Public Boards/Advanced 
37 comments – latest 4:
concannon (Jun 28, 2006)
Amazing. Wonderful skin tones. As far as Valo himself, I'd always been "blah blah what's the big deal" until I saw the music video for "Wings of a Butterfly", and now I'm like "guh". Granted, he sheared off all his hair, and I think that helps him (he looks kind of like a cross between Billy Idol and Billie Joe Armstrong from Greenday in the video.)
wboyer (Jul 10, 2006)
You so are freaking excellent at drawing tattoos, it's not even funny. And your portraits of musicians are just awe-inspiring... You wow me, stasiuk.
cianteed2 (Jul 19, 2006)
Thank you very much.
Axil62 (Oct 3, 2006)
I'm amazed
drawn in 6 hours 15 min with Oekaki Shi-Painter
Specialty Boards/Contest! 
  icon
Contest Week 29: Make it Metal
Kloxboy (edited Oct 1, 2006)
Contest Week 29: Make it Metal Your goal this week is to illustrate something that is ordinarily not made of metal and make it all look like it's made of metal. You can illustrate an object, a person, plants, animals, elements, whatever you want, as long as it's not already made of metal. You can use any type of metal you like: aluminium, copper, gold, iron, lead, silver, titanium, uranium, and zinc. Please do not copy other artists work and have fun. :) Additional Judging Crite...
22 comments
Public Boards/Intermediate 
Sweetcell (Sep 24, 2006)
*poof* Hard stuff. My utmost respect to those who've mastered this. That very tip of the flame gave me such a headache that I decided this was enough for now, but I'm definately going to try fire again. That match was fun to do.
18 comments – latest 4:
Sweetcell (Sep 27, 2006)
That smoke was so simple. A light streak of blue that barely showed and then over with the dodge tool. Thanks all again. Must try fire again. Maybe I'll go burn something and see how it looks. ;)
Deino (Sep 28, 2006)
I don't recommend that, they might get you a week long suspension >_> <_<
Sweetcell (Sep 28, 2006)
Well see Deino, I've got this neighbor I don't like....... :)
DeadlyBlondeArcher (Sep 28, 2006)
You did a great job on this, and my favorite part is the splintery wood on the matchstick.
drawn in 2 hours 43 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
Public Boards/Advanced 
safescene (Mar 14, 2006)
elle oh.

loosely based on a diane arbus photo. I haven't done this in awhile.
16 comments – latest 4:
Axil62 (Sep 15, 2006)
Mine is just one opinion, don't worry about it.
Your idea would quickly become nothing more than a popularity contest that has little to do with the actual quality of the piece. It's stupid.
sincity (Sep 27, 2006)
did I mention I have wood? Sorry, I really dig this piece. :}
Axil62 (Sep 27, 2006)
boner boner boner boner rump!
boner boner boner boner rump!
boner boner boner boner rump!
boner boner boner boner !
safescene (Sep 27, 2006)
For the record, I don't think it's advanced myself. The stupid thing makes you choose before you start, so I had to make a decision. Everyone's a critic.
drawn in 1 hour 59 min with Lascaux Sketch Classic
 
  displaying 441-450 of 958 — pages:   ← previous« 1 ... 4041424344454647484950 ... 96 »next →