1. The Most Intense... Vicious... Extreme... Must-See Battle of the Year... Between Rock, Paper, and Scissors.
2. We do the "Dab". 3. "One more time." 4. "Fine." 5. Win. Punch. Glory!
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Bottom Line: Spin that jank counter-clockwise faster than Usain Bolt on the track! It'll flip you the freak out! Visual illusions, bruh!
Mason the Wolf is the main character to my platform game "Back Home To Sonny". He is a giant grey wolf with white spots around his form and on his tail. He sets out on a death defying journey from the local dog catcher to get back home to his loving owner.
This image I chose, because it emphasizes the white chess pawn within the black ones by centering it in the image, and making it a different color than the others.
These are a couple screenshots from my video on YouTube. Using multiple software applications, I can successfully make videos and publish them onto social media for them to be seen internationally.
This here is a raster image. It's a raster, because these forms of images are made of pixels. If zoomed in close enough, tiny equivalent squares can be seen in the shape of the larger image.
One tool we used in class is the Eyedropper Tool. I like it, because it takes a desired color you want by clicking the color, changing the tool to the Paint Bucket Tool, and moving it over a desired area of the canvas to fill with that specific color.
Maurits Cornelis Escher (aka M. C. Escher) was a well-known Dutch artist. His muses for his work are nature, such as animals, settings, plants, and landscapes. Some of his art consists of impossible images like optical illusions mathematically aligned. He admitted he acquired no mathematical skill, but nonetheless, his work still consisted of it, and ultimately became widely popular throughout society.
A link to the official website of M. C. Escher is on the Links page. |