Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A version of ArtRage called "Ink Art" was included in Microsoft's Experience Pack for the Tablet PC in 2005 [18] and on some older Wacom tablets. Ink Art contained a subset of features offered in the full ArtRage program.
Inori Aizawa (Japanese: 相沢いのり, Chinese: 藍澤祈), also known as Internet Explorer-tan, is a moe anthropomorphism mascot character, originally of the Internet Explorer (IE) web browser and currently of its successor, Microsoft Edge, [4] created by Microsoft Singapore and designed by Collateral Damage Studios.
The founder of the European/Western variant/contribution to the (mainly Asian) Modern ink painting movement [5] [6] is Alfred Freddy Krupa.Krupa who is not a follower of Lui Shou-kwan (and in China is called "the Foreign Master") is doing something essentially opposite/different from Shou Kwan and his group, he reinterprets Western modernism in the form of the Far East ink art.
Microsoft Edge (or simply nicknamed Edge), based on the Chromium open-source project, also known as The New Microsoft Edge or New Edge, is a proprietary cross-platform web browser created by Microsoft, superseding Edge Legacy. [8] [9] [10] In Windows 11, Edge is the only browser available from Microsoft.
Windows Ink is a software suite in Windows 10 that contains applications and features oriented towards pen computing, [1] and was introduced in Windows 10 Anniversary Update. The suite includes Sticky Notes, Sketchpad, and Screen sketch applications.
Klecksography is the art of making images from inkblots (German Tinten-Klecks). [1] The work was pioneered by Justinus Kerner , who included klecksographs in his books of poetry. [ 2 ] Since the 1890s, psychologists have used it as a tool for studying the subconscious, most famously Hermann Rorschach in his Rorschach inkblot test .
Splashed-ink Landscape (破墨山水, Haboku sansui) by Sesshū Tōyō, 1495 Sesshu's landscape in hatsuboku style. Haboku (破墨) and Hatsuboku (溌墨) are both painting techniques employed in suiboku (ink-wash painting) in China and Japan, as seen in landscape paintings, involving an abstract simplification of forms and freedom of brushwork.
Haboku sansui (破墨山水図, haboku sansui-zu, Broken Ink Landscape) is a splashed-ink landscape painting on a hanging scroll. It was made by the Japanese artist Sesshū Tōyō in 1495, in the Muromachi period. The ink wash painting is classified as a National Treasure of Japan and currently held by the Tokyo National Museum. [1] [2]