***ART NOT BY ME***
***ART NOT BY ME***
***ART NOT BY ME***
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Would you REALLY trust someone that shade of flamingo?
Beauty-is-fur-deep bat this time wonderfully portrayed by
Nicnak044. =)
Love on the original here! http://www.furaffinity.net/view/15841682/
***ART NOT BY ME***
***ART NOT BY ME***
---
Would you REALLY trust someone that shade of flamingo?
Beauty-is-fur-deep bat this time wonderfully portrayed by
Nicnak044. =)Love on the original here! http://www.furaffinity.net/view/15841682/
Category Artwork (Digital) / General Furry Art
Species Bat
Size 1000 x 1200px
File Size 392.4 kB
Listed in Folders
Positively batty, darling! One of my favorites from the whole stream.
It's interesting... back in the fifties, Magenta was Hollywood's color du jour for creepy, terrifying situations. Nowadays, a la Matrix and zombie movies, whenever reality is off-kilter it's green. It's a complete 180. You're right at home.
It's interesting... back in the fifties, Magenta was Hollywood's color du jour for creepy, terrifying situations. Nowadays, a la Matrix and zombie movies, whenever reality is off-kilter it's green. It's a complete 180. You're right at home.
http://colorfulanimationexpressions...../label/magenta
Just compare the use of it in "Peter Pan" with the use of it in "Runaway Brain," and you'll see how absurdly comfortable the eighties made us - and the psychdedlic sixties - with a color that is actually really unnatural and disturbing. Oswald Iten's an absolute goldmine of it...
And pastel pink was huge! Hell, it inspired the single greatest Non-Audrey moment in any Audrey Hepburn movie ever made. THINK PINK!
But saturated magenta, like those B-movies, was seen as creepy. Yeah, those monster movies? Everything was pink. Magenta showed up as a perfect, horror-movie gray on black-and-white film, so... the Addams Family had a pink living room. It was a horror movie color! That's what people used it for.
Oh, I draw her too much, if anything. Don't worry about it! X3
(No, but please, watch "Funny Face." It has Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Kay Thompson, George Gershwin and Paris. And a lot of dancing.)
Just compare the use of it in "Peter Pan" with the use of it in "Runaway Brain," and you'll see how absurdly comfortable the eighties made us - and the psychdedlic sixties - with a color that is actually really unnatural and disturbing. Oswald Iten's an absolute goldmine of it...
And pastel pink was huge! Hell, it inspired the single greatest Non-Audrey moment in any Audrey Hepburn movie ever made. THINK PINK!
But saturated magenta, like those B-movies, was seen as creepy. Yeah, those monster movies? Everything was pink. Magenta showed up as a perfect, horror-movie gray on black-and-white film, so... the Addams Family had a pink living room. It was a horror movie color! That's what people used it for.
Oh, I draw her too much, if anything. Don't worry about it! X3
(No, but please, watch "Funny Face." It has Audrey Hepburn, Fred Astaire, Kay Thompson, George Gershwin and Paris. And a lot of dancing.)
FA+


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