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Colours on Fire
QTgillie
(May 10, 2009)
Not sure where I am going with this. Don't have a clue where to go with this so I am posting it. Any ideas?
Suntan (May 12, 2009)
I do speak English from time to time...*wonders where it's going to finish!!* :o
bette_davis_eyes (May 13, 2009)
different and very colorful.. I like it QT :)
jpjp1052 (May 13, 2009)
Very interesting effect. Great draw.
MARLONSEPPALA (May 18, 2009)
What about adding a red faced Devil on the left side. With it's tongue reaching out to lick the green melting ooze. |
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bette_davis_eyes
(May 2, 2009)
firecracker (May 7, 2009)
I just can't get over how "real" those goldfish look.....they look so alive!!! You really did a great job with this draw....and I agree with "MissDj"....the water does look "WET"!!! Beautiful draw!! :)
Pantera (May 7, 2009)
Coolest drawing, you have so much talent :)
LifeGotColour (May 8, 2009)
yes..the idea is great, but how you did it..it's incredible:)I tried to fix the splotchiness in the bg but I just made it worse.. can't see it while I'm using the applet .. but anyway, I've gotta get this out of my studio.
and thanks everyone for the lovely comments .. appreciate them all :) |
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elly
(May 4, 2009)
I have never seen a pink and blue butterfly before I came across a photo of one! I swore to rid my home decor of any pink or blue whatsoever but I never said I wouldn't draw with pink and blue!! I wonder what the caterpillar looked like for this guy??
KuteDymples (May 8, 2009)
Perfection!
shell (Apr 4, 2010)
love the butterfly's texture
MG (Jul 10, 2010)
That is really pretty, great depth of field effect also!
TeZzeR (Oct 9, 2010)
Amazing, Your so Talented |
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enjoydotcom (Apr 5, 2009)
Lately you see more and more (kids) posting on the wrong boards. Perhaps it is an idea to get the rules for drawing on which board on the front page. Or maybe there should come more mods.
54 comments
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Axil62 (Apr 28, 2009)
You may have heard about this before but it's still funny... A radio station routinely paid money for people to tell their most embarrassing stories. Here was one of the winners: I was due later that week for an appointment with the gynecologists when early one morning I received a call from his office: I had been rescheduled for early that morning at 9:30am. I had just packed everyone off to work and school and it was around 8:45 already. The trip to his office usually took about 35 mi...
27 comments
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Public Boards/Intermediate | |||||||||||||||||||||
jpjp1052
(Apr 30, 2009)
jpjp1052 (May 2, 2009)
First "Socialist" president describes him better than anything else.
Roytje (May 2, 2009)
Even a pig painting turns into a Obama discussion here. But hey, nice painting.
backmagicwoman (May 2, 2009)
My sister has five children of mexican and white mixed and three of them look like they are white and the other two look like they are mexican..and my other sister has four children who are mixed with white and black and they look more black than white......personally I believe we are all mixed with something down the line..so it' really doesn't matter...
JK-Arts (May 15, 2009)
I think Color has nothing to do with anything that should be political and it is a shame to me that people judge-another-by-color/race, refering to any persons charactorist as a person with or without a demener. "In those eyes who see only my color, shall those eyes only recieve what is only skued and may they blink so thier ears hear the truth." (JK-Arts)If i couldn't be any more relative I like the pigs color it comes off pleasant so i supposed it is a nice pig and it wouldn't snap at me when i tell it "Doctor i have no health insurence" ! |
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gel_o
(Apr 3, 2009)
catfish (Apr 3, 2009)
very pretty
firecracker (Apr 3, 2009)
Very pretty flowers.....nice one! :)
jpjp1052 (Apr 3, 2009)
Have you been working in your flower garden? These are so colorful and a very nice draw.
bette_davis_eyes (Apr 3, 2009)
very pretty tulips .. yellow ones are my fav :) |
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gel_o
(Apr 2, 2009)
catfish (Apr 3, 2009)
Burp!!excuse me. this is very good
Suntan (Apr 3, 2009)
Yummy bulbous rendering, gel. ;)
GreyGhost (Apr 3, 2009)
Wow, I can almost smell it ... and that's a GOOD thing! Long live the fragrant bulb.
bette_davis_eyes (Apr 3, 2009)
you did a great job on this gel o .. love those colors :) |
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Specialty Boards/Elite Bastards | |||||||||||||||||||||
Axil62
(Mar 25, 2009)
Axil62 (Apr 5, 2009)
Barack Obama’s revelatory moment may have come in his first week as president. On his first day of work, he signed an executive order prohibiting lobbyists from holding highranking administration jobs, thereby fulfilling a campaign promise to “close the revolving door” between K Street and government via “the most sweeping ethics reform in history.” Two days later, the president granted a “waiver” from the new rules to install Raytheon lobbyist William Lynn as the No. 2 man in the Pentagon. As offenses go, the move was trivial. But as a signal of a governing pathology, it established a pattern that Obama has repeated serially since being sworn into office: reiterate a high-sounding promise from the campaign, undermine said promise with a concrete act of governance to the contrary, then claim with a straight face that the campaign promise has been and will continue to be fulfilled. So candidate Obama promised to usher in the “most transparent administration in history,” in part by making sure the American people were allowed to read each proposed non-emergency law for at least five days before the president signs it. Yet in his first month, President Obama signed three laws from the liberal wish list—the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), the Lily Ledbetter Fair Play Act, and the $787 billion “stimulus” package—in less than five days. Explained the White House: “We will be implementing this policy in full soon.…Currently we are working through implementation procedures.” The SCHIP law, which was paid for in part by a cigarette tax hike of 61 cents a pack, also put the lie to a pledge Obama repeated after its passage in his first address before a joint session of Congress. “Let me be perfectly clear,” he said on February 24, with less than perfect clarity. “If your family earns less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increased a single dime. I repeat: not one single dime.” But not only is the cigarette tax a “tax” (and worth six dimes at that), it’s among the most regressive kind possible, since poorer people are more likely to smoke and spend a larger share of their incomes on cigarettes than richer smokers do. And it’s hardly the only tax Obama will levy on those not yet in the quarter-million club. In that same speech, and also in the budget proposal he handed to Congress shortly thereafter, the president called for a cap-and-trade system for companies that emit carbon. That would surely translate into a price increase on every gallon of gasoline sold in the United States, a change that would have more impact on the household budgets of working-class heroes than those of modern-day plutocrats. Spending? Candidate Obama promised “a net spending cut” in which “every dollar that I’ve proposed, I’ve proposed an additional cut so that it matches.” President Obama has proposed the largest net spending increase since World War II, even while holding summits on “fiscal responsibility” and vowing to live by the same “pay as you go” principles he’s already blown to smithereens. Deficits? A president whose first budget will expand the deficit into uncharted territory (see Veronique de Rugy’s “When Do Deficits Matter?,” page 21) nonetheless promises to cut his shortfall in half within four years. This, he claimed in his speech to Congress, will be achieved partly through $2 trillion in “savings” that will come by “eliminat[ing] wasteful and ineffective programs.” Analysts noted within hours that around half of Obama’s “savings” actually come from letting Bush’s tax cuts expire after 2010. It takes a certain kind of mind-set to characterize Americans’ taking home their own money as a “wasteful and ineffective program,” let alone tax increases as “savings.” Once you identify the president’s tic of celebrating the very campaign promises that he breaks, you’ll see it everywhere. So there he is, “proud that we passed the recovery plan free of earmarks,” just days after passing a recovery plan stuffed with what the investigative website Pro Publica described as “items that could arguably be called earmarks” (and in the same week that Congress handed him a new budget swollen with brand new chunks of pork). The stimulus package will “save or create 3.5 million jobs,” an elastic, impossible-to-prove projection that neatly gives him credit for either boom or bust. (For more on Obama’s stimulus, please see “Will We Be Stimulated?,” page 32. For more on the state government jobs that will be “saved” by using federal money to cover for bad fiscal management, see “Failed States,” page 24.) The two faces of Obama reveal more than just a politician hardwired to work both sides of a room. The new president’s political goals and governing goals are in tension. The post-Bush executive needs to solve a mammoth financial and economic crisis affecting the entire country, but the pre-Clintonomics Democrat needs to blame it on fat cats and Republicans. So in early January, the president-elect lamented that “banks made loans without concern for whether borrowers could repay them, and some borrowers took advantage of cheap credit to take on debt they couldn’t afford.” In February his administration pushed banks to lend still more to risky homebuyers while bailing out underwater borrowers. Technocrat Obama wants to jumpstart the “flow of credit,” which he has described as “the lifeblood of our economy,” but politician Obama wants to somehow surgically remove the “speculators” from the process. “I will not spend a single penny,” he vowed to Congress, unconvincingly, “for the purpose of rewarding a single Wall Street executive, but I will do whatever it takes to help the small business that can’t pay its workers or the family that has saved and still can’t get a mortgage.” The following week his administration authorized another $30 billion in the $163-billion-and-counting bailout of the Wall Street insurance giant AIG. There are both risks and rewards when a politician pronounces gray skies (particularly of his own making) to be blue. For now, Obama is mostly reaping the rewards. A public weary of the president’s tongue-tied predecessor is giving the eloquent new fellow the benefit of the doubt, as evidenced by an MSNBC poll in early March showing his approval rating at an all-time high of 68 percent. But that same poll pointed to Obama’s weakness: A substantially smaller number, 54 percent, thought the president’s policies were on the right track. The country seems to like the guy who talks about fiscal responsibility, less so the one who practices the opposite. The illusion will eventually give way, and voters will see more of who Obama is than who they wish him to be. In the meantime the president has proposed a budget blueprint that would significantly alter the way Americans spend money on energy, mortgages, charities, and investments, to name just a few areas. Will they recognize the tic in time? Matt Welch is editor in chief of reason.
titanium_rabbit (Jun 7, 2009)
i dont like essay long comments. a+ if u ask me
somebody (Aug 18, 2009)
Axil..you rock. You don't spout off uneducated garbage. You back up your convictions with facts. Thank you. I wish more poeple would educate themselves before committing verbal diarreah.
dorothyblueeyes (Nov 9, 2009)
Uh...I know for a fact,that Obama is gay,and bisexual,so let that affect politics.Yes,he is,he's closet,very closet.not honest to not admit it,not fair to gay groups.why not admit we have the first gay president?it's ok.we have plenty of gay congressmen. |
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Public Boards/Beginner | |||||||||||||||||||||
QTgillie
(Apr 1, 2009)
Anyone ever had some of these and did not notice the little black ones until after you had a couple of bites? ewwwww.....I did once when I was little.
QTgillie (Apr 2, 2009)
too bad the ants left, surprising, I would have thought they would have devoured these. Oh well, such is life....I drew them just for the ants.
Suntan (edited Apr 2, 2009)
Spring has officially arrived! A delicious painting, nice job on the bg, too. :p
GreyGhost (Apr 3, 2009)
Gained five pounds just looking at this ... thanks a bunch ;)
teodorika (May 2, 2009)
oh my... i wanna have a bite! :D |
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