jmBoekestein – Aw, I’m just glad if I can help 
Dimmur – You’re quite welcome :] And you’re not alone, lots of folks do that.
ArtisticVisions – Ha! I went there, I saw, and I liked. So hush you :]
Aloriael – Aw, thanks <3 I’m not quite that tall, though. I’m 167, but nearly always wear high heels. I love high heels. My friends are all insanely tall.
I’m so honoured I’ve inspired you. Thank you for telling me.
NOOB! – 
Lilie – Oo, it does sound interesting :] Thanks for telling. Heh, I did get sleep in the end though not much of it. Only ‘real’ sleep was last night, when I totally collapsed and slept for eleven hours of dreamless exhaustion. I still feel a little knackered. Damn this strange head of mine.
Artjunkie – :hides: you guys!
Just tell me if you ever need Azzy-fur reference, I’d be happy to snap more photos. His fur texture is gorgeous in sunlight, a little like a fuzzy li’ll bear.
Fooxoo – Heheh, yeah, I suppose I do. I tried to pronounce my name the way we do up here rather than how the English and the Americans say it - which is never quite right at all. Despite of training my foreign friends, I can’t get them to say it right, heheh.
And, well… I’m sorry to say that I’m terrible at perspective. I’d love to be able to help, but… well… I’ll go check your M&S entry out anyway :] Maybe there’s some bit of advice I can give.
Enialadam – Aw, thanks :] I’ll go have a peeksie at your piece right after I’ve replied to this thread, see if I can give you some bit of help there (I’ll give it in that thread rather than here, if that’s okay :] )
Mahtan – Thank you :] It’s been long since I read any kind of fantasy literature or similar. I stopped with those kind of books when I was a teenager, after having devoured what was honestly massive amounts of them (around four hundred, I suspect). Mythological books, which I do read, tend to be pretty heavy literature. The Iliad is an old favourite of mine. Dante’s Inferno is a lovely, but intensely heavy read. The fantasy books that I remember (and still love) are Tolkien’s, Katherine Kerr’s and some books by Stephen R. Donaldson - a series called The Last Chronicles of Thomas Covenant… all of these books nice reads and far more accessible than the Iliad. If you have the time or the urge, try to pick up Eddan, old Norse stuff, very inspiring :]
Alden –
thank you :} I’m glad you’ve found the Q&A informative - I feel like I’m just babbling in places… it’s so hard to stick to the topic at hand, and actually nail what people are asking me about :] As for your question – I find that I usually get the anatomy right without having to count… I resort to counting when I feel like something’s off or not working. The problem is, it’s only just good if the subject is not in perspective, not sitting, not bending down or over or leaning in one direction or the other. It’s always quite difficult to get proportions right :[
Erpel – Heheh, thanks :] Azrael is a difficult subject to catch - if I don’t do him justice, I feel awfully ashamed of myself.
Pushav – Heh, your questions are awesome. Now, lessee…
- Samurai Pizza cats? Er, I think I’ll go with Thundercats on that one.
- Pepsi Max :]
- Oh my… difficult question. I’d say: The Compleat Moonshadow, Morrowind (though not so much a videogame as a computer one - if I have to name a video game, we’d be going FAR back in history, to LadyBug and Mousetrap), and… my… cruel question. I’d have to say Nightmare Before Christmas, but it’d be joined by about at least twenty others that I absolutely, completely love.
- Hahah, no, but he’s learned how to type. He sometimes leaves my friends cryptic messages if I’ve accidentally left their icq windows open.
- I’m happy to say they love it, and have always been very supportive. Mom worries about the really dark stuff, and dad thinks I should just move abroad and make tons of money at it, heh.
- Nah, it’s fun, but the Q&A will soon be over.
- I’ll go looksee in a minute, give you an answer then - but I think I’ll be saying yeah :]
bcairns – Yeup, that’d be him. Very mischievous but so adorable.
Style – Hi hi :] For fun, eh? That’d be a long list. I read, I play games, I watch telly and movies (and for the moment, shamefully gawking at every Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode, as a friend has let me borrow all the three first seasons, oh my!), I hang out with my friends, I go for walks and I go out dancing. I go shopping. I am such a spendthrift. If I am in a poor mood, I’ll go downtown and just buy stuff - preferably pretty stuff, clothes, jewellery, makeup (sigh, am such a girl in some ways). I make masks in papier maché, I take insanely long baths, I read about serial killers, I surf the web, looking at pretty stuff and getting riled up by stupid conversations, and I sit around listening to music. A lot of it like pretty much anyone else, I suspect :]
Shyam – Ee, forgot to write you, getting right on it…
Dead pixel – Thank you kindly :] I’m glad the brushes are helpful, I was so hesitant about posting them first but I’m happy I did, now.
I’m not sure if I’ll ever get around to making such a dvd. Maybe one day - I think I’d like to focus more on painting, than on showing how to paint, for a while now. That is, after all, why I got into the business in the first place - to paint :]
Mosconariz – Hahah, silly <3 Thanks though.
Akima28 – Hi there Monique :] and thank you very much for your kind compliments. Don’t worry so much about what your family thinks about your work - my mother always finds my darker projects disturbing, and my brother hates my feminine men (‘draw real men!’, he’ll grump, ha ha). I go with what feels right, though, and I’ll try to depict whatever emotions run through me and what stories I come up with. It’s difficult to explain to someone who hasn’t got the urge to paint, themselves. Not everyone understands that without the darker moments, there can’t be any lighter ones - a painting of a happy, beautiful place is always nice to see, but the more haunting pieces are the ones we’ll remember… at least that’s the way for me, I rarely recall the ones that made me smile for a second and then click and close the window, or turn the page. Just stick to your guns, draw what you love and what you’re fascinated with - your family should be happy that you’re so inspired, and that you’ve found some way to convey your emotions and thoughts.
Jan-Mark – Thankee :] Hm. What’s important. Man, you do like to ask the difficult questions, don’t you?
I like to convey different things in my pieces. They’re usually some little iddy bit of me, of something I’ve felt or of something I’m unhappy about. I have a couple of pieces about the destruction of nature by mankind, as that’s something always close to my heart and always disturbing me (see my old piece “All that I loved is gone” as well as my master and servant entry). Sometimes, I’ll paint something that simply makes me feel happy at the moment - some of the pictures are sort of exercises in design or in beautiful things, but I still try to think of a story, of a point to them, of something going on in the background. I’m not one of those people with a major goal - with something they want to scream at the world. When there’s a message in one of my pieces, it’s discreet and gentle, and it’s not there to slap anyone in their face: if someone wants to take it to heart, they’ll have to look for it, and it’s rarely too obvious. Mostly when I paint, it’s to exercise my own demons, to get some thought or picture out of my head. I rarely think, “hey, the people need to KNOW this”, I don’t have an agenda and I rarely stop to think about how the message will be perceived - most of the time, it just flies straight by and nobody even notices. I don’t mind :] Does that answer the question?
ArtisticVisions – Much better, thanks :] Having art education to back you up when painting digitally is about as important as it is when you’re painting in water colours or oils or acrylics. The computer’s just another tool, after all. It’s nice if you know how to draw, but you can learn it either way, you know?
Orion 77 – Hi hi :] I’m afraid a lot of my paintings turn out looking a little like me. It’s an entirely subconscious thing - I end up painting myself into a lot of my paintings. I try to keep from doing it but it still happens… quite embarrassing really. I think most of my paintings show a little bit of me in one way or the other, though, so I suppose it’s just natural :] This one is no more a self-portrait than A Thought Made Flesh is (another painting that all my friends tell me looks just like me). Weird, they both have masks… hm.