Half the time, when I hear a song, the mood of it turns into a daydream. Just now I had a daydream of a little girl crying and a kind, soothing, wise person talking to her. It ended up to be just beautiful, so I decided to write it down and share it through Pixlr Editor (an app I have akin to Photoshop and Paint).
Pumpkins. Random. Projects. That's what it's about. October is "make an awesome pumpkin that takes an eternity to finish but is fun to make and admire afterwards." Mostly you'll see random projects I do. Whatever involves me creating something, even if it's just an idea. This site uses cookies from Google to deliver its services, to personalize ads and to analyze traffic. Information about your use of this site is shared with Google. By using this site, you agree to its use of yummy cookies.
Saturday, May 3, 2014
Inspirational Quote - Everyone is a Star
My sister was watching Breaking Dawn, but since we have a small place, I could hear everything in the movie, including the end credits. Now, the song that sings, "I've loved you for a thousand years" gets stuck in my head in a pleasant way, but my brain has this nasty habit of choosing certain parts of a song and playing it over and over in my head "for a thousand years", etc.
Half the time, when I hear a song, the mood of it turns into a daydream. Just now I had a daydream of a little girl crying and a kind, soothing, wise person talking to her. It ended up to be just beautiful, so I decided to write it down and share it through Pixlr Editor (an app I have akin to Photoshop and Paint).
Half the time, when I hear a song, the mood of it turns into a daydream. Just now I had a daydream of a little girl crying and a kind, soothing, wise person talking to her. It ended up to be just beautiful, so I decided to write it down and share it through Pixlr Editor (an app I have akin to Photoshop and Paint).
Saturday, April 26, 2014
The Headless Poptart
This morning, my mom brought me home a package of Poptarts. Now, I've noticed this has been around for a while, and I've also noticed something terribly wrong about this. So, using my terrible art skills using a computer (especially with a finicky touchpad: Ugh!), I've created something to open people's eyes with.
Message: Don't talk to headless corpses, unless they happen to be wearing the same outfit as you are. That's a cool way of making friends.
Kellogg's, your grim sense of humor is now out. Please continue to be awesome. XD
Thursday, April 24, 2014
I Finally Drew Something Worth Admiring!
Normally I'm terrible at drawing stuff just out of my imagination, but I did it. I was spending over a week at a friend's house (late March 2014), and one of the things we did was spend a few hours at her work for a few days.
As we got out of the car, she threw me her journal, "Here, write in this."
I asked her what sort of thing I should write, but she replied, "Anything!"
So, inside the cute, tiny coffee shop, I spent nearly three hours focused entirely on her journal. At first, I didn't know what I was doing, rambling random stuff on one page. By nearly the bottom of the page, I finally gave up and wrote: "Here's a random finger:" [sketch of my right index finger, poorly done]
The next page, I decided to make mysterious little lines I've often made out of boredom [and sometimes out of despair after drawing something poorly]. Soon, I realized I had made one of the coolest drawings I've ever made.
When I finally lifted my head from it and handed it to her, she laughed that she was wondering in such anticipation over what I was writing, as my face was very close to the paper and was silent the whole time. Right away, when she opened it to the page, she let out a strong "Wow". Yay! I was happy.
The only unhappy parts are how I drew the lady's bosom and how I made the lines too narrow underneath her nose. I don't like it. Oh well.
Lol I just noticed how it looks like the lady's mouth is open in a weird way! It's actually closed and smiling.
As we got out of the car, she threw me her journal, "Here, write in this."
I asked her what sort of thing I should write, but she replied, "Anything!"
So, inside the cute, tiny coffee shop, I spent nearly three hours focused entirely on her journal. At first, I didn't know what I was doing, rambling random stuff on one page. By nearly the bottom of the page, I finally gave up and wrote: "Here's a random finger:" [sketch of my right index finger, poorly done]
The next page, I decided to make mysterious little lines I've often made out of boredom [and sometimes out of despair after drawing something poorly]. Soon, I realized I had made one of the coolest drawings I've ever made.
When I finally lifted my head from it and handed it to her, she laughed that she was wondering in such anticipation over what I was writing, as my face was very close to the paper and was silent the whole time. Right away, when she opened it to the page, she let out a strong "Wow". Yay! I was happy.
The only unhappy parts are how I drew the lady's bosom and how I made the lines too narrow underneath her nose. I don't like it. Oh well.
Lol I just noticed how it looks like the lady's mouth is open in a weird way! It's actually closed and smiling.
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Awesome Homes - Everybody Live In Hobbit Holes! Here's Why....
With so many trees and heavy branches falling in the Northwest,
tornados and super cold weather (such as the polar vortex) in the Midwest, and
big hurricanes in the South, why can't we figure out a better way to build homes?
What about hobbit holes?
"Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry,
bare, sandy hole... it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort." ~ J. R. R. Tolkien's The
Hobbit.
Take the advice from nature, itself: The rabbits, the ants, the bears, the burrowing owls. They sleep/hibernate in the ground and work outside. So, why can't we do the same?
Not only does being underground keep you cool in the summer and warm in the winter, it also eliminates/reduces the chances of your home from becoming a scattered pile of toothpicks after a tornado/hurricane/wind storm.
It's also a green thing to do. Reduces global warming, your garden can grow on top of your
house, you can get free water through the rain seeping through the dirt into a water-cleaning machine thingamajig on your "roof" (invention?), and a number of other things.
That said, somebody make this happen!
tornados and super cold weather (such as the polar vortex) in the Midwest, and
big hurricanes in the South, why can't we figure out a better way to build homes?
What about hobbit holes?
"Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry,
bare, sandy hole... it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort." ~ J. R. R. Tolkien's The
Hobbit.
Take the advice from nature, itself: The rabbits, the ants, the bears, the burrowing owls. They sleep/hibernate in the ground and work outside. So, why can't we do the same?
Not only does being underground keep you cool in the summer and warm in the winter, it also eliminates/reduces the chances of your home from becoming a scattered pile of toothpicks after a tornado/hurricane/wind storm.
It's also a green thing to do. Reduces global warming, your garden can grow on top of your
house, you can get free water through the rain seeping through the dirt into a water-cleaning machine thingamajig on your "roof" (invention?), and a number of other things.
That said, somebody make this happen!
so
or this?
=
Hobbit holes ought to be put to the test in storm country. Don't you think?
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