🦣 @[email protected]

6.9K posts

🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat

@Sakayra

Fur Stylist

Katılım Mart 2010
171 Takip Edilen148 Takipçiler
🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@TaniDaReal Used years are out of warranty, but you get the next year half off! And may I interest you in some refurbished months, may be slightly scratched but are deeply discounted. -- Happy birthday ;-)
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TaniDaReal
TaniDaReal@TaniDaReal·
My birthday is on Black Friday. Does that mean I’m getting 20% younger?
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🦣 @[email protected] retweetledi
Vanda..
Vanda..@orchidee_vanda·
Die Trollarmeen wollen verhindern, das man das teilt. Die TV-Sender prügeln weiter auf die ein, die es den Menschen einfacher machen wollen! #Habeck4Kanzler
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@Pan_H_Shiroi The two solutions of the Fermi "paradox": 1. Aliens are like us - and have died out already; 2. Aliens are not like us - and pass by in their UFOs with their windows firmly locked...
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
My dog is dead. Trump is president. My shoulder hurts once again. Germany's government falls apart, making room for a ruling party that wants to go back to 1950. Classic media are now lying as much as social media. I don't know whether I have a job in 2025. Worst year, 2024.
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Peggy
Peggy@DevilsPegasus·
@Sakayra 2024 gibt sein bestens, ein absolutes Horror Jahr zu sein. *Drückt dich feste aus der Ferne*
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@Pan_H_Shiroi The sad thing may be that too much of this worstness is rooted in humanity's tribal nature, and will not change without major effort or some million years of evolution. ...Or maybe an alien invasion would do it. Yes, an alien invasion would be very welcome right now.
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Pan Hesekiel Shiroi
Pan Hesekiel Shiroi@Pan_H_Shiroi·
@Sakayra *hugs* Kinda hard not to lose hope in these trying times, isn't it? However, there is one thing to always remember: Nothing lasts forever, even though it sometimes feels that way.
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@whippybroom771 @wolfvelvet5 and the cool fingertips holding each other many years ago, in the evening when the cicadas were chirping and the wind was blowing the wheat waves. It is a worthy and eternal memory in the world. 2/2 (Says the translator, seems fine?)
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狼绒wolfvelvet
狼绒wolfvelvet@wolfvelvet5·
当你老了,白发苍苍, 靠坐在晚冬的火炉边, 你首先会想起的, 很可能不是金戈铁马,不是锦衣玉食 而是多年前,在那个夏日蝉鸣,风吹麦浪的傍晚,她那双亮如星辰的眼眸, 鼻尖细沁的汗珠,还有相握微凉的指尖。 是人间的值得与永远的怀念。 设定:尤里 狼绒 画师:wintom
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@whippybroom771 @wolfvelvet5 When you are old and gray-haired, sitting by the fire in late winter, the first thing you will think of is probably not the wars and battles, nor the fine clothes and delicious food, but her eyes as bright as stars, the beads of sweat on the tip of her nose, 1/2
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@CaraidArt It is certainly still growing, so the potential of the fandom is not yet fully tapped. I see that the move to Hamburg was quite right to provide "more" of everything.
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@CaraidArt You may want to drop last year's numbers as they are likely an outlier due to the late venue change and the moved date. Also, badge numbers reflect the registration but do not take cancellations into account, so your number is possibly higher than the total attendance.
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baLOrKIn 🔜 EF
baLOrKIn 🔜 EF@baLOrKIn·
@Pan_H_Shiroi Thank you! T_T I'm so happy this fully idea worked out. It was a lot of work, though. I hope people will appreciate it.
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baLOrKIn 🔜 EF
baLOrKIn 🔜 EF@baLOrKIn·
I'm so effin happy about this?? Metal Sleipnir, y'all. An entity scouring the web, the fastest ghost of all, looking to play pranks on feisty netrunners and causing havoc in corpo clusters. #cyberpunk #equineart This will be available in the art show at Eurofurence.
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TaniDaReal
TaniDaReal@TaniDaReal·
We have finally finished moving!! 🏡📦📦📦 It took a lot more work and time than expected, that's why I have been pretty quiet and slow with new art. But this will change again soon :)
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Pan Hesekiel Shiroi
Pan Hesekiel Shiroi@Pan_H_Shiroi·
Been down with a nasty case of food poisoning since last night. Urghs ... First Mr. Fox, now me ... those grapes weren't good for sure (ironic, I know). :')
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
So, Amazon Prime wants to "show ads" now? Immediately cancelled. Obnoxious ads on TV are why I'm streaming, after all. No, I'm not going to pay more either; it's just not worth it.
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🦣 @[email protected] retweetledi
Noah Bradley
Noah Bradley@noahbradley·
Artists are struggling. Artists are usually struggling, but they are struggling more and in different ways than before. I’ve been hearing these refrains: “I’m not growing my following any more.” “It’s harder to sell my art/courses/products.” “I get fewer likes/comments than I used to.” “I don’t know why I make art any more.” Are these the workings of the Algorithm Gods? Has AI already destroyed the online art world? Do we, collectively, just suck? Are we each just failing in our own special ways? As with all things, it’s a complicated trend and I don’t think anyone can answer it completely. But I’d like to propose a few reasons and even a few solutions. How to build a pyramid Artists usually like looking at art. Many people who follow artists are themselves artists. One by one, we build the hierarchies of the art world. Those at the top reap the greatest rewards and are further bolstered by the most attention, an upward spiral for a lucky few. It has been possible for newcomers to climb that pyramid. A new, exceptional artist can enter the scene, other artists share their work, and the algorithms bless them with attention and praise. A star is born. But I think this is getting harder as the top solidifies. The same artists occupy the most attention and success on all of the social media platforms. Sure, sometimes artists fade into obscurity or disrepute (hi), but that seems rare. The rich get richer and those at the top of the social hierarchy continue to dominate. I worry, though, for those succeeding on social media platforms. I have seen the rise and fall of many platforms and I see how rickety the foundations appear for many of those artists. Moving an audience off of Twitter, for instance, is incredibly difficult. If the algorithm changes or the platform crumbles, will your career endure? There’s too much art There’s never too much art, but there is absolutely too much art online for most of us to properly consume. 99.999% of drawings or paintings will not be looked at for longer than a second. Artists pour dozens of hours into creating work that is glimpsed, once, for mere seconds. If it garners a double-tap, that’s an achievement. Most work is scrolled past, unremarked. If ten thousand people are making a new painting every month, that’s still a tremendous amount of art to consume. I like art, but that’s pushing it. When we’re presented with the fire-hose of artistic content, we value it less, we scroll faster, we care less. With so many options, it’s all that much more likely that we will consume the art that everyone else is looking at—better to let the crowd tell us what’s good so we don’t have to sort through the thousands of artists ourselves. Algorithms are a bitch Algorithms love engagement and drama. Pretty paintings are not usually very controversial. So artists engage in more drama and less art. They see their following grow. But then they post their work and watch engagement drop. So back to drama. Pretty soon, these artists have cultivated an audience obsessed with drama and only vaguely interested in art. Do not succumb to the siren call of audience capture. Further, algorithms love to arbitrarily change. A rising star can suddenly run into a brick wall—where they found success before, now they only find underwhelming responses. Left without the gold stars of validation, they are likely to make less work, further solidifying their decline. We’re encouraged to make boring art The most successful art is not necessarily the best art. The most successful art is simply the art that is most successful. The art that wins the game of social media attention. I already complained about this, but I’m going to rant again, briefly. Art that does well is usually work that is easily consumed. Easily grasped, enjoyed, and moved on from. Social media is not a museum for contemplation. Further, we are apparently encouraged to both produce consistent work and homogeneous work. Followers want to see the same general sort of work—experimentation usually flops. And they want to see a lot of work. Frequent posts. Daily is best. What’s an artist to do? Churn out same-y work that can be executed in a few hours. There are definitely exceptions There are artists who are doing great and making slow work. I think most of them, though, grew their following before the current influx of artists. There are exceptions, but I don’t think that disproves all of this stuff I’m writing about. But as with all things, exceptions will exist and there’s always a chance that I’m glimpsing just an insular bubble that’s struggling right now. Video is more popular now Unfortunately, we all decided to make paintings and not videos. Aside from process videos, there are only so many video options a painter has. Shit. Thankfully not everyone prefers video. And thankfully we do not need everyone if we hope to make art. We just need enough people who appreciate what we do and want to see us continue. Technically we don’t even need that, but it’s nice to have. We are in an art recession Recessions are a loss of hope and I think artists lack hope right now. Faced with all of the problems above, I think a lot of artists are withdrawing from the art world. They see the insurmountable obstacles and give up. Some aspiring artists, tragically, are giving up before they’ve even begun. Only the most foolhardy/brave carry on. AI hasn’t helped. I have a lot of thoughts about AI—I think it could end up being a good thing for artists—but I think we can all agree that it has sparked a lot of fear in the art world. Artists are afraid of being replaced. Of their work being fed into an uncaring and unremitting machine which will spew forth endless imitations of their art. Artists are afraid of losing their livelihood and their meaning. They’re even afraid that all of the years they have invested in learning to make art will be for nothing. I’m not sure if all of these fears will come to pass, nor does anyone else. But the fears are very real, which is all that matter for what I’m talking about here. Because artists are afraid, we are creating our own art recession. Artists are afraid, so they’re making less work. Artists are afraid, so they’re not trying as hard. Artists are afraid, so they’re not learning as much, nor are they spending as much money to learn—fearing that in a few years that will be wasted money and time. Thus we create our own self-fulfilling spiral into recession. We see our engagement declining and assume our fears our valid, that doom is here. We see our income falling and confirm that AI is surely destroying our lives. I don’t think the only thing we have to fear is fear itself—but we should all be very afraid of fear. Fear is not a conducive environment for art making. Fear, without hope & bravery to face it, is perhaps the worst precondition for art. An actual recession is probably exacerbating everything We, in the western world in particular, are probably in a recession right now. Inflation is hitting hard. Many times, the art world rides out a recession just fine. People want escapism and they want to learn a fun skill when times are hard. But this time seems different. Perhaps it is a perfect storm of fear that has effected art. Maybe AI really is destroying everything. But whatever it is, I think that the financial world’s recession is effecting the art world’s recession. When we’re all struggling to buy groceries, buying art and art education seems a bit hard to justify. What to do about all of this Lay down and die. Ok, maybe that’s not the best option, as much as we might enjoy that. None of us, individually, can solve this problem. But we can do the best things possible for ourselves, which coincidentally are the things that will lead us, collectively, out of the hole we’re occupying. 1. Enjoy the decline. I will not fault any artists who capitalize on the current demands of social media. If you want to make easily-consumable art and videos and TikTok dances and drama to please the algorithm, get famous, and make a lot of money, go for it. The demands of life are real and I will never judge someone for trying to do what they can to make it in this world. 2. Create the best work you can. If you want to make the highest impact work in the shortest amount of time: photobash & use AI to make some crossover fan-art with cute animals. But I would encourage you to go the opposite way. Create great work. Refine your skills, grow to be an incredible artist, and paint meaningful work. Blow us all away. Elevate art to the next level. It may take time, but I still think that excellent work is the best way to stand out in the art world. It is not all it takes to succeed commercially, but it’s damn important. Further, I think that excellent, original, meaningful work is the greatest hedge that you can create against the AI uprising. If there’s anything that will keep you secure, it’s probably great work. 3. Invest for the long term. If things are shit right now, you’re not growing your following, engagement is down, and your income sucks: invest in the long term. Invest your time in the projects that will take you years to complete. Don’t fight over the scraps right now, if you can avoid it. Instead, aim to have something to astonish the internet in a few years when things are doing well again and people have money to spend. 4. Hope. Hopelessness will ruin you. If you lose hope, you cannot recover. Even when things get better in general, you will lag behind the wave. You will be the last to ride the rising tide and the least rewarded. Those who are hopeful when all is hopeless are the ones who often end up on top. It’s easy to say that you should hope and much harder to actually do it, particularly when all of the evidence around you is telling you to give up. I am well aware. I often wonder when the best time to give up is. But none of us can really know. I will say this: humans have been making art for tens of thousands of years. It is exceedingly unlikely that we live in the generation where that tradition ends. It is perfectly possible, but I’m willing to bet that it’s not going to happen. Are you? 5. Build a strong foundation. It’s easy to assume that a given social media platform is permanent. Surely nothing could topple these institutions. But they can fall. They can vanish. And if your career vanishes in conjunction, then you have a shaky foundation. Strengthen your foundation. An email mailing list is the most durable form of following on the internet. Easiest to transfer and to keep, hardest to destroy (though with more email clients filtering out mailing lists, even that’s not guaranteed to last forever). Create your own website and keep your content there. Host it yourself, if you can. It’s not that hard. At least own your own domain name. You are gambling with your future if you do not have a permanent home for your art that you own. An ArtStation portfolio doesn’t count. 6. Diversify your skills. Sometimes the best way to stand out is to diversify. Learn some new skills and become more than just an artist. Even tacking on a few adjacent skills (graphic design, video editing, writing) can help you rise above the heap. 7. Do more traditional work. It will be a long time before Midjourney creates oil paintings. It could happen and I’m sure eventually it will. But it will be a long time. And even then, there will be collectors who greatly value traditional work made by human hands. Now is the time to get out the pencils and paints and create originals. 8. Connect locally. When the internet is going mad, you can often find sanity in the real world. Find artists and friends locally. Meet up and sketch. Go to life drawing. Check out some local galleries. Remind yourself what art is all about. You are probably far too wrapped up in your own head, unable to see everything wonderful around you.
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🦣 @cairyn@toot.cat
🦣 @[email protected]@Sakayra·
@joabaldwin Looks totally sweet as a tablecloth, and it would be nice to look at, however, the main part WILL be covered by the wares Khajiit is offering, and become obscured which is more of an irritation. Banner is better for audience to study.
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Pan Hesekiel Shiroi
Pan Hesekiel Shiroi@Pan_H_Shiroi·
@Sakayra But EF is over now, is it still going to eat me? D: And thank you, I am. I hope your stress levels weren't too high this year, either.
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Pan Hesekiel Shiroi
Pan Hesekiel Shiroi@Pan_H_Shiroi·
Home, sweet home. EF was amazing, although taking a fall behind the open stage certainly wasn't so amazing ... at least my knees look way better than they did a couple of days ago. :')
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