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51 votes, 13 comments. 19K subscribers in the jackboxgames community. A subreddit for Jackbox Games, best known for creating…
A subreddit dedicated to sharing graphs created using the Desmos graphing calculator. Feel free to post demonstrations of interesting mathematical phenomena, questions about what is happening in a graph, or just cool things you've found while playing with the calculator.
Some are very funny, others on the verge, and I love the drawings - they fit well :) Laughed a lot at the beach one. Thank you for sharing Edit: And love the racoon one. Edit2: and the NYC one and the livestream one - that one was deep.
Thank you so much!!! Yes. I set it to host decision timer. And just draw with a bunch of people, and we go over everyone's work, and we all improve and learn from each other.
1K votes, 183 comments. 31M subscribers in the pics community. A place for photographs, pictures, and other images.
The unofficial subreddit for The Amazing Digital Circus, an indie animated series created by Gooseworx and Glitch Productions!
r/WhiteboardDrawings: A collection of drawings from whiteboards. Post your own drawings too.
aircraft carrier, airplane, alarm clock, ambulance, angel, animal, ant, animal migration, anvil, apple, arm, asparagus, axe, backpack, banana…
Suggest dogs to draw in the comments plz (more info below) I’m doing an art project for university. I need as many dogs as I can come up with who were the 1st (first) to do something. It can be anything. So far I have, Laika first dog in space, Tooms first dog to swim the English Channel & Rupee the first dog to climb base camp on Mt Everest
Drawing things from observation is generally the best way to improve. Don't be afraid to draw the same thing more than once. Try drawing something in 10 minutes, then draw the same thing again in 5 minutes, then again in 1 minute. These exercises are like doing your "art pushups", and they'll will make you a stronger artist the more you do them.