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May 27th, 2005 | #41 | |
The paranormal silent type
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Quote:
And to what ends, when you basically have a so-called "2 Party System" to vote between?
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May 27th, 2005 | #42 | |
A Merry Kwan
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Quote:
OMG, I'm laughing so hard in this thread. You ought to do entire commic books with these characters, brutus. |
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May 27th, 2005 | #43 | |
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RE: Kind Lampshade Maker
Quote:
These cartoons were drawn as a retaliation against the jew, plain and simple. A hard illustrative slap to the face of our enemy to get his attention and let him know that I hate his guts. The jew incessantly portrays White men as twisted and ridiculous caricatures in the various jew-owned medias and my cartoons are my blunt way to give same in kind. The difference being that my cartoons have their basis in fact and truth. I mix the message between the dark realities of the jew menace and an occasional funny lampoon to lighten the mood and give us some comic relief from my hard-core hate of the kike. Every once in a while I will take a playful poke at the niggers. I fully realize that my work may appear slapstick on the surface, but I have purposely designed them with various metaphor and symbolism for multiple levels of racial understanding. For example, In post number #32 entitled “White Nationalism pulls back the curtain and shows you who the wizard really is.” Make note of the color of the shirt sleeve on the arm pulling back the curtain. A “Brown Shirt” will have a special meaning to some. If any particular group is offended by my drawings, well that’s too bad. And if Alex Linder should grow tired of my cartoons, he can easily pull the plug. In the meantime, I will draw what I feel like drawing.
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 28th, 2005 | #44 | |
The paranormal silent type
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Quote:
How about creating a "Flip Book" or "Thumb Cinema" (auf Deutsch, "DaumenKino") which is a stack of the same cartoon going about minor changes which get noticed when one rapidly flips the pages, giving the appearance of animation. The pics could get shrunken for self-downloading for those who wish to print out their own. Here's an example of such books:
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May 28th, 2005 | #45 | ||
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RE: Kind Lampshade Maker
Quote:
Quote:
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 28th, 2005 | #46 | |||
The paranormal silent type
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Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
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May 28th, 2005 | #47 | |
The paranormal silent type
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Quote:
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May 28th, 2005 | #48 |
The paranormal silent type
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..., to this fully developed frog:, it only took 44 pages. Including the preface, cover and the other inert ingredients, this booklet measures 3/8 of an inch.
Your pic amounts to a heigth of 216 pixels. To move the business end of the crowbar to the bottom of the pic, within 44 pages, you would have to move the end of the crownbar 5 pixels per frame. The fulcrum would move less of a distance, of course. But, since Microsoft” Paint” only revolves a pic at 90 degree increments, you will need different image software, to avoid changing the crowbar angle, at swinging, using mechanical intervention (printing the pic, then scanning a printout after having turned it in the direction that the crowbar was swinging)...
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May 28th, 2005 | #49 |
The paranormal silent type
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....The flying tooth is easy to move, through cutting out and re-pasting every 5 pixels without having to revolve the tooth. You may try revolving the tooth 90 degrees, every 4 frames.
If you zoom the pic to its maximum 800% blow-up, you could reliably work the pic, pixel by pixel. I revolved the tooth for your 5th frame, in the clockwise direction and lowered it 4 pixels per frame featured, as the crowbar drops 16 pixels, before the tooth turns again:
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May 28th, 2005 | #50 | |
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RE: Doc
Quote:
I’m sure that many people would like to see me draw something inappropriate and that could possibly get this website closed down and the whole lot of us thrown in jail for good measure. I know where to draw the line between good taste and senseless vulgarity. I would never draw a cartoon like this: Moment of Impact Nope! No way Jose’! I’m sorry but I won’t do it! Even if you begged me, I wouldn’t do it. Not even if you said pretty please with sugar on top.
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 29th, 2005 | #51 |
The paranormal silent type
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Just suggesting – changing the sound to a boxing ringside call bell „Ding“ which would show up only during a few frames at the point of connection between the crowbar and the head along with the added musical notes, at which point the hat will start flying simultaneous with the unhealthy, rotating tooth.
I remember some angle-changing option in an “Excell” program I used to work with. I think I used to call it up, while doing a “Word Art”. I’ll go back later tonight and see if I could find it. In the mean time, you might want to ask “Cracker of the Whip” if he knows how to do something like that. Now that I thought it over, I don't think you will have to shrink the pic for flip-books. Even though my printer is down, it seems to me these pics are small enough
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May 29th, 2005 | #52 | |
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Argument
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May 29th, 2005 | #53 | |
The paranormal silent type
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Quote:
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May 29th, 2005 | #54 | |
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RE: Kind Lampshade Maker
Quote:
SIG SG 550-1 Sniper. Manufactured in Switzerland by Schweizerische Industrie Gesellschaft (SIG), this semiautomatic rifle chambered in .223 Remington caliber (5.56 X 45mm) The military sniper operates on the principles of tracking, concealment, observation, and long range engagement. Generally, one quick shot is all that is needed, with a hasty retreat to follow.
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 29th, 2005 | #55 |
......
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Hymies having a bad day.
Things don't look so good for Hymie today, do they?
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http://www.vnnforum.com/showpost.php...64&postcount=9 Doppelhaken, Draco, Richard H, ToddinFl, Augustus Sutter, Chain, Subrosa, Jarl, White Will, whose next? |
May 30th, 2005 | #56 |
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Please allow me to reveal to the ladies in the audience,
where the Oprah Show is really produced.
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 30th, 2005 | #57 | |
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RE: Kind Lampshade Maker
Quote:
The thumb book is cool, too..........maybe I should just go all-out and get into full blown animated cartoons and adapt them to internet viewing. The skies the limit. I’m thinking along the lines of “The Simpsons“, but my version would feature a family of kikes called “The Slimesteins”. Think of the possibilities!
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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May 31st, 2005 | #58 |
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I'm going to admit here I thought you cartoons sucked when you first started posting them in the chutzpah section. They're getting better every time I look. I envy people who can draw. What do you use to draw those?
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May 31st, 2005 | #59 |
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Reminds me of the classic strobe photos. Here's one |
May 31st, 2005 | #60 | |
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RE: Border Ruffian
Quote:
I use the paint program found in accessories. I have been at this for only a couple of months and I’m still learning. The hardest part is drawing with the mouse. Sometimes it’s hard to translate the movement of the hand into lines on the screen. The small muscles of the hand have to be trained to do what I’m trying to tell them to do. It’s like trying to learn to write with your opposite hand. But, it’s getting easier with each picture. The computer does have it’s advantages over a paper and pencil, especially with the editing and coloring. However, I’m not really what you’d call a real artist. I’m more of a hack doodler. Sometimes the drawing will come-out looking pretty good. Like the one with the kike taking the JFK shot. And then other times I can’t draw a picture to save my life. It’s something I can’t force, I have to be in the right mood I guess.
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The ink of the learned is as precious as the blood of the martyr. For one drop of ink may make millions think.
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