| Website | https://poyribn.codeberg.page |
| I will change my Username | Waiting until Mastodon can migrate Posts |
| Website | https://poyribn.codeberg.page |
| I will change my Username | Waiting until Mastodon can migrate Posts |
every step of the journey counts
Especially now. More than ever. This is the way.
Ringing in the New Year!
original, beautiful, collectible, human-made; art for all.
This piece is by Torredelforth (http://www.torredelforth.com)
Interested in collecting or creating? Follow and reach out!
Art is meant for humans, not AI. AI will never match the raw creative potential that exists inside of every artist.
This piece was created by an artist out of Argentina.
Inspired by the variety of shapes and colors of meadow grasses -
A sunny day in the meadow - acrylic painting
--> https://karenkasparartprints.com/featured/a-sunny-day-in-the-meadow-karen-kaspar.html
#meadow #nature #grass #art #painting #artist #arte #contemporaryArt #colorful #abstract #abstractart #abstractpainting #colors #InteriorDesign #TraditionalArt #kunst #ArtForSale #handmade #MastoArt #FediArt #FediGiftShop #MastodonArt #BuyIntoArt #ArtistsOnMastodon #creativeToots
@sosasees personally I like the simplicity of the ‘image > action > context’ method. The problem is that being too concise feels very clinical and devoid of the joy an image brings to the sighted. I find just a tiny bit of effort can bring a tremendous amount of ‘light’ to a description.
I came across an excellent article recently by Alex C, of UX Collective, that did a really great job of explaining this subtlety:
https://uxdesign.cc/how-to-write-an-image-description-2f30d3bf5546?gi=86663a01c865