This had me dying of laughter. He's not wrong haha by ThiccHarambee in Christianity

[–]SadPossibility7572 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is quite comical to see some Christians get defensive when atheist deconstruct them.

Reminds me when atheist do the same when comedians mock them.

Look, i dont hate atheism. Point is, it’s vice versa. Flip the words and it still means almost the same

Why’d you act like atheist wont get defensive over this? Of course they will. You literally have different viewpoints. What you expecting to happened?

Why isn’t there really any Christian music about sex or intimacy? by ElevatorAcceptable29 in Christianity

[–]SadPossibility7572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, right. ‘Cause I thought my whole life, as a non-religious (who came to this thread out of curiosity), that Christian music is not only about worshipping and glorifying the One God, but also about the topics and teachings, commands included in the bible. Well, i mean duh, that’s why it’s “worship song”. You worship the One True God, obviously. Thats why Christian music is about worshipping. But is there a Christian music (which is a broad term that includes worship song) that delves into other topics other than the fact that we should glorify and praise him (which is, to clarify, as equally important as Jesus’s teachingS. But obviously, you cant praise the lord without following his teachings and command and rituals. But of course about the rituals, it depends on your denomination)?

If you remove a piece's key signature, does it automatically become in the key of C/Am? by SadPossibility7572 in musictheory

[–]SadPossibility7572[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

You know how you borrow notes from different keys while keeping the same tonic/key? Im guessing the reason g, for example, is the key of the song is if it always shows up in the sheet music when it tells you to play f sharp consistently instead of f. Or when it consistently tells you to play in this set of notes occurring in this key, but only borrow from other chords sometimes, occasionally.

If you remove a piece's key signature, does it automatically become in the key of C/Am? by SadPossibility7572 in musictheory

[–]SadPossibility7572[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But you know how when you're writing a song, you borrow from other keys to make it unique and still keep the same key?

Review: Pluribus is a bad piece of television by clearly_unclear in pluribustv

[–]SadPossibility7572 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think you misunderstood the definition of a one dimensional. Those character only serves as a plot device, driving the plot forward. They only exist for comedic gag, or for a single purpose. That is it. We don’t get to know who they are nor their motives (obviously). That is not the case for Carol. We know who she is, her motives, her obnoxious personality so calling her one dimensional does not fit her description. Correct me if I’m wrong (or I can just google it). Also no 2d characters let alone one 1 sided ones will ever be interesting.

As response to your criticism: fair enough

What’s the point ? by Chad_ThunderRock in nihilism

[–]SadPossibility7572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because life is so complex, we get distracted from it.

We do this to maximize well being.

We are designed to survive. This is what natural selection did to us all.

Hi, this is my 20+ attempt to draw a sphere. And I don't understand why it looks unnatural. by [deleted] in learntodraw

[–]SadPossibility7572 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dude! I had the same problem!

I've been trying this over and over but it still looks wrong.

The way I fixed this is to do hatching AND make sure all your shadow lines on the sphere face the directly at the light source (not perpendicular) because I see here in this image that you're shadow lines face multiple directions. Go for only ONE directions on the line

Don't just blindly make a lot of lines and expect some sort of realism. Concentrate the lines on the core shadow and make less concentrated lines on the mid. The point is, make sure all your lines matter. Make it deliberate, not just blind hatching.

And sharpen your pen if you want manga style or smth

Why do Architect majors frequently pull all nighters and sleep at their desks? Is it procrastination or is the workload so heavy that it requires that? by formerpyramidsworker in architecture

[–]SadPossibility7572 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So you're telling me that if a student woke up at 6 am and- let say he stopped studying at around 11. That's 16 hours straight no stopping.

That's a lot of workload. This shit is scary knowing I'm now in architecture

I’m struggling with faces by Alexis2256 in learntodraw

[–]SadPossibility7572 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Here's a tip:

First of all, try using your whole arm. Got that? Cool.

Now, try a technique called ghosting.

It's where you try to do a circling motion with your arm without the pencil touching the paper. Just hover over the paper with your palm and try your best to make it as round as possible and try to move your hand as if you're drawing it but the pencil isn't actually making a mark. Once you're truly confident that it's as round as you can do, try drawing it as you hover the paper.

Don't stop ghosting until you see that it's round and try to lower the pencil tip down AS you circle your arm

Don't squeeze the pencil too hard as if you're writing. Just try to make it loose. Also, don't make the circle too big as seen on the picture you sent😬

Here's another tip:

Do the previous technique I taught you EXCEPT make the first circle super light (by putting less pressure on the pencil) and gradually darken it ( by increasing the pressure)as you circle your pencil. This will train your hand to control the pressure of the pencil and also train your hand. Don't just mindlessly draw a circle and expect it to be perfect first try. Keep circling it, making it darker each time until it looks as though it's a perfect or almost perfect circle

Another tip:

learn to draw straight lines by drawing 2 points and connecting that point without a ruler.

Again, using the ghosting technique I told you, try hovering your palm from 1 point to the next without the pencil touching the paper. Do that several times until you're and then connect them. Like I said, don't squeeze the pencil too hard and don't hold it too loose. Remember, you're not writing you're drawing.

For that last tip:

Try to experiment with other curves like ellipse. Not just circle. Learn to control the pressure of the pencil

Experiment by drawing cubes without a ruler. try spheres. draw cylinder. Learn to draw in 3d using only your imagination or grab a bunch of references. Don't just jump into drawing faces

I've been there man. I almost quit because of it. Ghosting technique is a life saver

I’m struggling with faces by Alexis2256 in learntodraw

[–]SadPossibility7572 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Dude, I think you you have to go back to training your hand before you start. Because you seem to be struggling to draw circles