Is this pose (and others like it) knee_up, leg_up or leg_lift? The tags seems kinda overlapping and confusing to me and all those tags turn up similar pics.
Is this pose (and others like it) knee_up, leg_up or leg_lift? The tags seems kinda overlapping and confusing to me and all those tags turn up similar pics.
Then these need to be split apart, though, like painting and painting_(object. Painting is also a noun... Only logical and is pragmatic, because one term describing two thing (an object and an action) isn't that good.
Then these need to be split apart, though, like painting and painting_(object. Painting is also a noun... Only logical and is pragmatic, because one term describing two thing (an object and an action) isn't that good.
Let me just list these definitions here first.
Sketching: Before a complete drawing we draw the sketch of the drawing, and we work freehand, meaning that we draw the multiple-cross lines and it lacks the details that a complete drawing may have. Pencils, ink, and charcoal can be the medium through which sketching is done. Sketching is done on low quality papers like newsprint, etc.
Drawing: Drawing means full art drawn using colored pencils, markers, graphite pencils, or pens to create a full picture by drawing single-pass lines that looks more neat and clean than free hand sketching. Drawing is done on high quality papers like drawing paper, Bristol paper, etc.
Painting: In painting, multiple layers of colors are placed on each other (first background, then first layer of paint, then second, and so on) by use of brush and water- or oil-based paint. A painting may look complete after finishing it but some paintings don’t seem too complete until the end of the process.
Split theme's wiki is pretty specific about it being applied to characters though, certainly doesn't mention settings or anything else.
Perhaps rather than a tag about the different time/weather, does anyone know if there's a tag for a portal like that (not the torii but the concept of a window in space leading somewhere/when else)? I can't really think of any at the moment other than gap, which is obviously not correct.