Jump to content
  • entries
    169
  • comments
    264
  • views
    8,678

Picture of the Day ~ 11.28.15


Curious

636 views

We haven't had a sugar skull in a while, so here is my latest one.  This was done with colored pencils.   I did try a little shading on the bird, but the rest is just straight coloring.  I used a fair number of the tri-color pencils on this one.  I used a yellow one on the hair to try and give it a little more texture than just a straight yellow would look.   I think it turned out ok.

sugarskull2.thumb.png.ccaf9f04caa56b5896

  • Upvote 1

0 Comments


Recommended Comments

There are no comments to display.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • JermajestyDuggar

      Posted

      2 minutes ago, Wolf in Sheeples’ Clothing said:

      In the book Silas Marner, there is a character called ‘Eppie’ which is short for Hephzibah.

      The baby is named Eppie Daye and her mom is Holly Daye. Seriously. 

    • Wolf in Sheeples’ Clothing

      Posted

      7 hours ago, Pancakes@Tiffany's said:

      Eppie (I swear a fundie named her baby this)

      In the book Silas Marner, there is a character called ‘Eppie’ which is short for Hephzibah.

    • Smee

      Posted

      She may not have any formal qualifications, but Jana has plenty of skills that could help her get a job if she wanted/needed to. I even think she could handle the repetitive nature of work - since she was a child she's been dealing with the boring ass daily grind of washing clothes and dishes and dirty faces day after day after day. What she lacks is ambition. There's a song we used to sing at my evangelical church, it starts with the line "there must be more than this" and goes on to be about wanting to be closer to God and have deeper passion for him etc. Any time Jana (or any Duggar) has had thoughts of more, of dissatisfaction with their life and desire to DO something less mundane, they've been taught to translate that into wanting more God.

      I could, however, see Jill studying some day. Not now, but maybe in 5-10 years, when she's finished having children (I'm not sure Freddie is her last) and they're a bit older and more self-sufficient. I see so many mothers of school-aged kids and teens saying "am I too old to do this? I'll be 45 when I finish studying" and if they're financially secure often they do decide to pursue the thing they've long had an interest in.

    • Black Aliss

      Posted

      Mother Jones Magazine has found out about T. Rex Arms. In today's newsletter:

      Quote

      March 28, 2024

      Ever heard of GunTube? 

      I hadn't, until I read this crazy story by Lila Hassan, published on our site today. GunTube is what, as Lila writes, extremism researchers call "an ecosphere of gun influencers whose videos peddle a wide range of conservative content." Their argument goes like this: Guns can help good Christian Americans defend against the hellscape the USA has become, as evinced by—you guessed it—the liberal media, gun control efforts, and Black Lives Matter protests. As Lila writes: 

      While some of its most popular videos offer product reviews and shooting tips, they are accompanied by a wide range of political content, including interviews with conservative officials and activists. In weekly “T.Rex Talks,” Lucas and his brothers sit in a dimly lit studio to discuss America in decay, and how like-minded, God-oriented people can save it. They often reference the end times and urge their viewers to seize control before things get worse. “They’re selling products,” says Max Rizzuto, another Atlantic Council researcher, “and the product is ideology, too.”

      As Lila's piece explains, this ideology also relies on patriarchy, among other things. So, in summary: Guns don't just kill tens of thousands of Americans each year, they're also the latest tool conservatives are using to recruit more people—and men especially—to their cause. 

      "Christian firearms accessory company." That's a contradiction in terms if ever there was one.

    • keepercjr

      Posted

      8 hours ago, Maggie Mae said:

       

      The field of journalism has changed dramatically. But saying "they work for the rich" and are "sellouts" is so juvenile and lacks any sort of understanding of the state of the industry. 

      Calling people "sellouts" because they took or kept jobs when their peers and colleagues were being laid off is just cruel. It's also not that deep. Not everyone in journalism is into hard-hitting investigative journalism. There are sports writers and sports casters, arts and entertainment, political analysts, anchors, feature writers, food writers, etc. There's a former Attorney General who writes a garden column and occasionally a piece on local politics. I guess he's a "sellout" too, reminding us when to start our peonies and snap peas. 

       

       

      My good friend in high school has had a great career as a sports writer.  He has lived in NY, Honolulu and other places.  Is it hard hitting journalism? No, of course not.  But sports is something that interests people. 

      • Upvote 1


×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.