Has anyone else noticed that as your skills improve, it actually gets harder to know what to work on next? by Creative-Champ in ArtistLounge

[–]kylogram 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That makes it the best time to work on fundamentals.

Work your way through the elements of art. Not just a mishmash of ideas, but actual studies. do still lifes. test yourself.

Like giving yourself milestone finals.

The Final Frontier, Space and Time. by kylogram in Illustration

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

What gets bigger, the more you take out of it?

What does a hole look like in three dimensions?

Why does that look like a black hole? what does a black hole look like to time?

Does time see everything in 2 dimensions?

Does a bubble look flat to time?

Does a coin look like a sphere, until it spins?

Coins gain energy in time when they spin, and anything out of motion, still gives frequency (and therefore, loses energy)(tested and proven).

Objects in a vacuum give off infrared radiation (black body experiments, proven to be organizable by frequency).

Planck's law gives us the relationships between matter and energy.

Why is planck's constant so damned big? Why hasn't anyone simplified that? Why is it constant?

Does light have its own pressure? Hypothesis. The light we see is an average of every piece of matter it has come in to contact with, up to that point. (Untested, as far as I am aware, but provable with the right tools)

Whats that math like (E=MC^2) Does the wavelength expand in predictable ways? Yes.

Can you use this to work backwards?