- My procrastinating butt finally refined TobiSaku sketch that I’d been keeping in the dark for nearly a year 😌
I had little headcanon that Sakura calls Tobirama ‘Tobi’ just to mess with him and he feel irritated at first but quickly doesn’t mind and likes it eventually.
(One day, she and Hashirama spamming ‘Tobi’ together. Tobirama heard it and explodes, Hashirama gets the ruthless beating as a reward.)Sakura still continues calling him that and had forgotten the main reason by now.
(via sakucrossing)
Because DreamWorks was concerned about theological accuracy, Jeffrey Katzenberg (former Disney chairman) decided to call in Biblical scholars, Christian, Jewish, and Muslim theologians, and Arab American leaders to help his film be more accurate and faithful to the original story. After previewing the developing film, all these leaders noted that the studio executives listened and responded to their ideas, and praised the studio for reaching out for comment from outside sources.
The animation team for The Prince of Egypt included 350 artists from 34 different nations. Careful consideration was given to depicting the ethnicities of the ancient Egyptians, Hebrews, and Nubians properly.
Both character design and art direction worked to set a definite distinction between the symmetrical, more angular look of the Egyptians versus the more organic, natural look of the Hebrews and their related environments. The backgrounds department, headed by supervisors Paul Lasaine and Ron Lukas, oversaw a team of artists who were responsible for painting the sets/backdrops from the layouts. Within the film, approximately 934 hand-painted backgrounds were created.
THE PRINCE OF EGYPT (1998)
(via thetiptoeingtulip)
(via sympauny)
The Maresh brothers from Shades of Magic, not being in a life or death situations for once.
Not ripping my heart out like usual.





The full series of Shades of Magic character cards commissioned by @foxandwit! I posted a few here, but I thought they looked really cool side by side!
I started this project late 2018, and it’s really interesting to see how each card changed and improved bit by bit…