#maja colours
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Colouring before and after!
I was tagged by @changbeens and @parksunghoons. Thank you friends ♥
It always makes my day when this challenge goes around again. I love seeing peoples’ colourings and skills. Like yes, all the ccs slay so hard for real. I love it here ♥
The non-colour parts (the outer part in case you were wondering) is also without sharpening and topaz, cause I thought that was a fun little touch. My only two points for my colourings are add warmth and I hate green lol. I mostly just wing it, because that’s what makes giffing fun to me I think!
I will tag @woozi @junsfangs @chanstopher @chanrizard @agibbangs @minzbins @wabisaba @ortali @woosansang @bangzchan @choibeomggyu @song-mingi @slowlydiving @wonjinist @kyubins @kdongyoung @strhwaberries and @soonscoups ! (If we don’t know each other HI! ♥) As always no pressure if you don’t feel like it!!
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Colouring before and after
I was tagged by @choiliner, @minzbins and @facethesuns. Thank you friends ♡
I chose 9 gifs, because I have a lot of colourings I quite like and because I can. One side is with colouring, sharpening and all that fun stuff, while the other is without any of it (colouring, sharpening, sparkles, camera raw etc.). I just think it's fun to see the difference of it all. I don't think I do anything out of this world with colouring, I just like to keep them natural and warm for the most part! ♡
As always, I'm not sure who's done it and who hasn't (or who even wants to), so feel free to ignore this, but I'm tagging @hwanswerland, @bandzboy @jeonsupershy, @tmpttion, @shorelinnes, @chanrizard, @xiaojuun and @sunghanbin ♡
#maja talks#*colouring#tag games#most of these are really just usual normal easy colourings#but i am satisfied with them so there's that#surprised i only used one minho ngl but oh well this isn't my skz blog
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Appreciate your local gifmakers!! 😤
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maya as the random woman i saw on the street, aka normie maya
[id: a drawing of maya fey from Ace Attorney in regular clothes. She has her hair down and is wearing a purple cardigan, pale pink camisole with black lace and a short denim skirt with a dark magenta belt. She is drawn knees up. There's an official Maya picture in the top left corner. End ID]
#art by me#art#digital art#maya fey#ace attorney#ace attorney fanart#maya fey fanart#LIKE CMON#THE EXACT SAME COLOUR OF THE SARDIGAN#SAME LENGHT SKIRT#CAMISOLE SAME COLOUR AS HER CLOTHES#i didnt see what shoes she was wearing#she had this hairstyle btw#imagine if her name was Maja lmao
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also got my nails beautifully done today <3
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Also on Tumblr @majozaur 🥹🫶✨. Gorgeous watercolours!
Maja Wrońska
#watercolor#watercolour art#watercolour#fucking beautiful#gorgeous#painting#art#artwork#colorful#colourful#Maja Wrońska
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Yellow Fields: Eberhard Weber's Masterpiece of Jazz Fusion
Introduction: Released in 1976, Eberhard Weber’s “Yellow Fields” stands as a landmark in the realm of jazz fusion, marking a definitive period in the evolution of the genre. This album, recorded in September 1975 at Tonstudio Bauer in Ludwigsburg, West Germany, captures Weber at his creative zenith, supported by a stellar quartet that includes saxophonist Charlie Mariano, pianist Rainer…
#Charlie Mariano#Classic Albums#Dieter Bonhorst#Eberhard Weber#Gabi Winter#Jazz History#Jon Christensen#Maja Weber#Manfred Eicher#Martin Wieland#Rainer Brüninghaus#Return to Forever#The Colours of Chloë#Weather Report#Yellow Fields
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Finished the base gifs for my anniversary set! Now there's just the fun parts left uwu
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The Balcony
Artist: Edouard Manet (French, 1832-1883)
Date: 1868-1869
Medium: Oil on canvas
Collection: Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France
Description
When Manet painted this painting, scenes of bourgeois life were a fashionable genre. However, The Balcony did not meet any of the expectations of the public of the time. All the characters were close friends of Manet. Berthe Morisot, seated in the foreground, made her first appearance in the painter's work, for whom she would become a privileged model. But they are depicted in a frozen attitude, as if lost in an inner reverie. The scene offers neither story nor anecdote. In this, Manet freed himself from academic rules, although the reference to Goya's Majas on the Balcony (1764-1828) is obvious. In fact, when The Balcony was presented at the Salon of 1869, incomprehension prevailed. "Close the shutters!" quipped the caricaturist Cham, while a critic attacked Manet for "competing with house painters". The vividness of the colours, the green of the balustrade and the shutters and the blue of the man's tie, as well as the brutal contrast between the white dresses and the half-light of the background, have the effect of a provocation. The hierarchy between the figures and the objects is not respected: the flowers are more worked than some of the faces.
#painting#oil on canvas#group of figures#dress#fan#glove#umbrella#balcony#balustrade#plant#dog#man#women#edouard manet#french painter#artwork#european art#genre art#france#19th century painting#shutters
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Colouring before and after
I was tagged by @seonghwasblr, thank you maja <3 I've been wanting to do another one of these forever, as you can see by some of the gifs here being more than one year old already lol. I almost never save my psds for storage reasons. all of these are just some gifs where I was impressed with my colouring, so I saved them for future reference ajsgas. i really like trying to make bad lighting look normal, and i feel like by now i'm doing a decent job of it. i really hate a blue tint and can work best when the lights are disgustingly red (also yes i've used the rythm ta one before BUT this one is my attempt at recreating my original colouring of that gif. and also that's the best recolour i'ver ever done, sue me lol).
idk who's done this but no pressure tagging @seonghwacore @lovebitxx @ye-xiu @yeofi @applejongho @jeongyunho99
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Xdinary Heroes Break the Brake (2023)
#xdinarynet#xdinary heroes#kbandsnet#useroro#lunanuggets#rosieblr#awekslook#usertheos#userbbie#megtag#aleksbestie#userzaynab#oorieri#kpopccc#malegroupsnet#*m.gif#tw flashing#gifs#I feel like i've unlocked a new era of maja colouring with the last gif lmao
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Sometimes you watch an mv and you think "damn these colours are so vibrant!" and then you go and make gifs of it..
Suddenly they're not that vibrant after all lol
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hello! i hope ur day is going well! im not really sure how to word this but ur one of my favorite gifmakers on this site!! and i was wondering if u have any tutorial or would be willing to tell how!! do u make ur gifs so sharp! along w being so smooth and gorgeous im foremost always just stumped at how beautifully sharp ur gifs r!! not to mention the coloring!! regardless of if u get to answer any part of ur process or not, i just wanted to tell you ur gifs r very very beautiful. im always so awed and admiring wnv i see them! so warm and prettily colored yet so sharp!! apologies for gushing here, pls have a good day!!!
AHHH THIS MAKES ME SO HAPPY, ANON! It always makes me so happy, when I get any kind of compliments on my gifs, so this really really really warms my heart!! ♥
I did a gif tutorial like 1,5 years ago which you can find here! My sharpening has changed slightly from back then, so I'll just tell you what I do now.
Much more detail under the cut (this got way longer and detailed than I had expected)!
This is a walk through of my sharpening/effect process, so if you want any tricks about colouring or anything let me know!
The first important step to sharp gifs is the video quality! The higher the video quality is, the prettier and sharper your gifs will be. TS files are the highest quality (most of the time, sometimes they kind of scam you ngl) files you can get. Else 4k videos are great too! For me I usually don't go under 1080p (with few 720p exceptions). Sometimes I don't really like TS files, because they're a bit too sharp for me. This is mostly if it's a variety show. Concerts tend to be not as sharp in my experience.
I use vapoursynth to resize my gifs before putting them in photoshop. I usually don't do any sharpening or denoise in vapoursynth. This site has everything you need for vapoursynth!
For sharpening and stuff in photoshop, I usually do camera raw + topaz denoise + sharpening + 1% blur at 30% oppacity.
A bonus tip is, if you've done everything and tried soooo hard to make it non-grainy, but you just can't get it to do whatever you want it to... embrace the grain and add a noise layer! I do this with big gifs (540x540) usually.
To go more in depth, my settings for those are as following...
Camera raw
Texture (tekstur) I usually go between 20 and 30, depending on the thing I'm giffing. For Clarity (klarhed) I do the same number as texture, but minus 10. Idk why, it's just how I usually roll!
For Topaz denoise I usually only use a little bit. Like 0.04-0.06 overall strength. I don't really have any "this is what I always do" settings, but usually my shadow is at 0.90 and my highlight is 0.48 (because I liked it one time and then just kept it). You can also use the denoise option in vapoursynth, I just prefer photoshop, because it feels like I have more control over it. I know a lot of people don't use denoise at all, but I usually do with files less than 4k quality!
OBS! Using topaz denoise on smart objects in photoshop is a bit tricky, but I made a video about it once, so here you go! (the video is kind of outdated for me, so ignore the sharpening part and focus on the "how to do after you've put denoise on your gif" part. Also ignore my voice, thank you).
Sharpening:
These are my settings for sharpening. If I think the gif is a bit too sharp after I've added a blur filter, I change the amount (mængde, sorry my ps is in Danish) to 80% and that usually does the trick!
If you use all of these, this is how the smart object will look, before you convert it into frames
Let me know if you have any other questions or anything at all!! ♥
#ask#answered#anon#tutorial#kind of#I've kind of considered doing a “maja's tricks and tips for colouring and other stuff with gifs” post so let me know if that has any intere#i answered this as soon as i got home cause I got excited that someone was asking me for tips ♥
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WE HAVE A TRAILER
youtube
...
It seems my earlier bitching about the language decisions might've been... somewhat unwarranted by the possibility that the good bear named himself, since he speaks like a Northerner and only the weirder corners of Finnmark would say "hvit". I'm being very generous here since this trailer has the heroine utter the line "I can call you Kvitebjørn", but you know. At least it's how he would say it.
We might be dealing with the Norwegian equal to colour-blond casting, which is dialect-blind dubbing. Which you know, works in film set in most contemporary settings but is just weird in anything claiming depict some historical setting.
I never saw "Wish" but this song has both the MC change her sound patterns for a rhyme and relies on her Northern phonology for a different one (the only thing that would've made that better was if Mimmi Tamba IRL was the kind of northerner who says "nu"). It is a profoundly weird listening experience, and while I unfortunately can't find out if Dear Grandpa and Mum are also linguistic northerners from what's up on YT, I do note that the local flora, fauna and every other character except one with lines in the songs I've heard speak Standard Eastern. Why does MC have a different dialect? She's a third generation immigrant at earliest and those normally do not adapt their grandparents' variety of the language rather than the majority one.
Both films, from what little I've heard, also display the sad, sad tendency of writing a script in Bokmål, telling the actors to perform it in dialect, and then either not correcting them or not letting them use their natural syntax which creates an unfortunate uncanny valley effect because all of us know that no northerner would ever utter the sentence "mitt egentlige navn".
The other Maja Lunde filmatisation this Christmas allegedly struggles with the same, albeit the variety "child speaking like a nineteen fifties novel". (and its anonymous setting being very obviously filmed in very emblematically northern Tromsø while its inhabitants sound like this is somewhere generically around Oslo)
And while I am absolute 120% NOT complaining about Odd Nordstoga getting to write his BGM songs in Nynorsk, it contributes all the more to the linguistic anarchy since the trailer at least has a narrator speaking what I expect is Bokmål.
Anyway: I heard one of the songs on the radio and while I sadly realised what I heard only towards the end it was RAD and yes I will forgive this film anything for the music alone
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It’s Maja! Thought you’d might like this guy! I’ve got quite the collection of eclectic plushes and I found this guy at a local festival booth on the beach. Still doesn’t have a name…
-weepysheepie
He's lovely! 🌈 He's so colourful!
I feel like he needs an artist name, like Vincent, or Renoir, or Claude (given names or surnames will work equally 👍🏻)
Maybe pick an art movement you like and look at the famous names within it 😁
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Mini Series that can be watched over a long weekend
Fame Game (2022)
A thriller starring Madhuri Dixit as Anamika, this mini-series was dark and eye-opening from so many perspectives. The show is available on Netflix with just 8 episodes and can be called her significant break on the OTT Platform after her films Kalank and Maja Maa. The series has an air of mystery and an eerie aura throughout. While each secret unravels in every episode, the morose story behind the lives of celebrities is apparent. It is obvious how they have tried to highlight the truth behind the facade they have to carry as a celebrity, along with appearing as a picture-perfect family.
Though I was excited by the prospect of watching Madhuri Dixit on the small screen along with numerous talented actors, I was taken aback by the somberness of the show and how clearly the difference in their lives is showcased. Even the trailer tries to set the reality and the onscreen life of the actress in the show, but it was so much more intricate than one can imagine. While the show is colourful and engages the audience throughout, the end is a little unceremonious. And yet, it makes sense considering the points they established throughout the show.
A Suitable Boy (2020)
The show features the life of a literature student post-independence and the various challenges she faced while forced to make tough decisions for her life. The storyline is based on Vikram Seth's book of the same name and is available on Netflix with just 7 episodes. While the show revolves around Lata, it also pivots into the lives of various youngsters around her, who are her cousins and family friends. In a country that has just recovered from a massive change in government and is on the precipice of significant changes for the future, this show allows us into the minds of individuals in that area wrestling with their own mindsets and expectations.
Having started the show with no expectations, I was pleasantly surprised by the little details that were ingrained into the aesthetics and their lives which makes it so much more insightful into the lives of individuals nearly 8 decades ago. With numerous shows today segregating individuals as either modern or traditional, Lata was a surprising blend of both. Her mind was progressive with expectations above and beyond for her life, while she also stayed constant in her culture and values that would impact her personally. Though her choice of the groom at the end of the show surprised me, it also made sense for the woman she was and the position she was in. Though she had numerous instigators in her life trying to push her into making decisions that they would like, Lata braved the world and made a choice that was her own which struck a chord in me.
The End of the F…ing World (2017)
Seeing the alarming title of the show, I had steered clear of it to avoid answering my parents if discovered watching it by chance for a very long time. This miniseries based on a novel of the same name is available on Netflix and comprises 16 short episodes. While the show starts off on a peachy note, it takes us on a journey with the teenager, James, who firmly believes he is a psychopath. Having conducted his own experiments on himself to confirm his suspicions, his perspective and direction change when he meets Alyssa. While quirky and impulsive on her own, Alyssa convinces James to take a journey to find her estranged father which entails a series of trials.
Funny in its own way and challenging to our monotonous perspective, this show gets to us all. After finally watching it at the beginning of the pandemic, this show stole my heart and made me wish I had a companion as they both had each other in their bizarre situations. While the beginning is as alarming as its title, the show progresses into their minds episode by episode and giving us an insight into how people make their decisions and how life changes so unsuspectingly. With short episodes that barely tire us, it is an amusing watch, all things considered.
Unorthodox (2020)
With no idea what the show was like or what it was about, this miniseries was a shocking revelation into a world existing in a famed city that we all know of. Prominently set in New York and Germany, this show features the story of a Hasidic Jewish girl who flees her community to start a new life. Being introduced to it through a random Netflix suggestion, this show changed my mind in a matter of 4 episodes. A tale that is daunting to those of us living in a comfortable community, this show is a wake-up call on how we choose to educate ourselves and be a part of global platforms.
While the story was unsettling to watch, it was nearly impossible to imagine the control that a community has over you if not checked often. While communities and religion were formed to help humanity to regulate the chaos that we are in and to tackle the world, this show puts a perspective on the amount of power our faith can give to individuals who wield power in any given community. Blind faith has never been the answer and yet is still the most expected commodity out of any individual in any situation. The show at the end of the day shows us the courage of a girl too young in a world that is too large, trying to sway her in every other direction to control her life.
Bombay Begums (2021)
Narrating a tale of four women and a young girl this mini-series puts a perspective on the working of the world and the challenges that are a part of a woman's life, no matter their age, caste, position or power. It starts with Rani and Shai, who are a part of a prominent family in the banking world. Then moves to Fatima and Ayesha, two of the employees in the same organization, and eventually Lily, who is fighting her own war. All the women live in modern Mumbai and fight against struggles that nearly any woman in India or maybe other places also faces. The dialogues hit home as the story moves in an unpredictable direction leaving us with a sharp sting of reality over 6 episodes.
While expecting a show full of politics and deception, the show actually delivered a narrative that was far too real and outstanding. While the show is strictly feminist by nature, it also does not predispose to a narrative that favours women in any way. Though some may call the show dramatic and over the top with the choices some of them make, I believe we all have the power to make those same choices and find realities that might be far more solemn than what is shown here.
Hymn of Death (2018)
A melancholic drama set in the colonial era in Japan-Korea, this show has a way to find a place in your heart, based on the real story of the dramatist Woojin and the soprano Simdeok who had an ill-fated relationship. Having found each other in Japan during their studies amid the Japanese invasion, the two slowly grow a bond with each other. During the many trials they both face, they seem to have fate on their side as they keep finding each other every time. Being set in an era where life was hard and fighting to hold on to their passions was harder, these two find an end to their troubles in each other's presence.
With no idea what the show was about, this mini-series left my heart broken on how unimaginable the world was over a century ago for people in their youths. While the story is primarily about their relationship and its trajectory afterwards, it also sheds light on the expectations that were laid on the individuals of that time, the expected familial duties concerning their own economic situations, the hidden impacts of the invasion and companionship that has nothing to do with romance. Hymn of death might have a poetic tragic ending, but it is still priceless for the stories illuminated through the tale of these two lovers.
Kingdom (2019)
A dynamic series of 12 episodes set in medieval-era Korea, it is a thriller-horror show ruled by politics. A falling nation with the King in hiding and people starving, the story is led by the prince in search of the truth of what is happening in the palace. But with each layer he strips off and every morsel of truth he discovers, he finds that humanity is scarce when it comes to people saving themselves. Released around the same time as the covid pandemic this show features a pandemic of its own kind and the way the people of a small country deal with a disease that spreads ruthlessly and takes lives like a reaper.
With so many influential opinions on the show from critics and on social media, this show was everything and more. It is brisk and strikes down its story clearly. While there was much left in the dark, the story went from a perspective to focus on the bigger picture with every episode. The strong characters and the realistic circumstances keep us on the edge of our seats. As the story swerved into a whirlwind with so many details and brilliant visual direction, it is absolutely binge-worthy and gripping till the end.
Sweet Home (2020)
Another Korean mini-series focussed on a monster outbreak set in modern Korea, this show is imaginative and dark with plenty of gore. While the show is not for the light-hearted, the characters stand out for their uniqueness and will to fight against everything to hold on to their humanity in dire situations. Based on a webtoon of the same name, the show initially focuses on Hyunsoo, a young adult plagued with dark thoughts who moves into a shady apartment with plans of killing himself. With 10 episodes, all spanning 50 minutes, this show is ingenious and a hidden gem.
Even though I had been hesitating to watch the show after hearing about the gore, the show became a surprising favourite. With characters that seem too real and the concept of evolution thrown at us with this perspective, this show can be easily overlooked due to its disturbing visuals. Like any apocalypse story, this show has characters with some stereotypes, but the way they all are shown in their realities and their hidden vulnerabilities makes us attached to them all one by one.
Squid Game (2021)
Well-known for featuring chilling games and the authenticity of people's lives, this show deserved every bit of fame that came in its direction. Known for taking the internet by wildfire, the story features individuals with financial debts being recruited to play children's games, much like gambling, to get rid of their debt if they get to the final game and win it. Sounding simple enough to nearly all the participants, the show starts somberly, initially focussing on the life of Seong Gi-hun. But only once they enter the game do they all realize the reality and risks of the game. With 9 episodes and another upcoming season, this show is bound to keep any audience on the edge of their seat.
Having avoided plenty of shows because it was overrated, this show left me appalled, yet it made sense. While in the end, the character says if he was given the choice again, he would have chosen differently; I believe the realities of their lives often make people make hard choices that they would probably make again despite claiming otherwise. The show exposes capitalism and elite culture around the world from a perspective of a middle-aged man. With unnerving characters, all of whom are fighting for survival, this show is savage and yet enlightening.
My Name (2021)
Featuring the story of a young girl who loses her father to a criminal while being a crime lord himself, it goes on to show the woman she raises herself to bring justice to her father's death. The show is set in urban Korea, where the hidden crime world is exposed and how she has to work through the ranks to get what she wants. While the show has plenty of action and violence, it keeps the core story constant throughout as she makes her way into the world. With numerous characters looking to use her in their own ways and make her a pawn to the existing social structures, Jiwoo finds her own people to help her through her journey.
Unconventional and insightful, this show takes us into the misogynistic world of crime where we quickly find ourselves waiting for Jiwoo to find the truth and her peace. Through the 8 episodes, it is obvious how incredibly hardworking and single-minded she is about her goals. Two things the show evidently focuses on are the way the people around you shape you as the person you are and the comfort necessary for an individual to stay human. Refreshing with a female protagonist who isn't delicate and a complex antagonist, this show is sure to leave an imprint in the mind of any audience.
#article#film critic#film review#my name#kdrama#korean drama#squid game#yoon jiwoo#choi mujin#sweet home#hyunsoo#kingdom#hymn of death#lee jong suk#bombay begums#madhuri dixit#fame game#celebrity stories#mini series#netflix#netflix shows#bingewatching#binge watch#english#series#shows#unorthodox#a suitable boy#the end of the fucking world#the end of the f***ing world
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