Note: You probably have to click the green flag twice. The cat always wants to visit you before it's supposed to. Also, you might have to wait for the cat to disappear once you switch to creativity. The cat wants to be with you. FOREVER. Use space to navigate through the slides. On the art slide, wait 2 seconds and the costume will switch (between the lineart and my original drawing). On the creativity slide, you can click the red lines (the original lines for the challenge) to hide them and see the piece by itself.
-SCROLL DOWN FOR THE CREATIVITY STORY- I was going to do all three, but then I didn't have time. Also, I forgot to pack my drawing tablet and I'm on vacation for a month, so my cat drawing is horrible. But I think the coloring part of the art is pretty good. I used Pixelmator (Mac) for the art sections and Paper (iPad) for the creativity part. I am super proud of the creativity part :3 And, as always, Scratch killed the quality of my cat. So, as always, go to my site. All three pics are there. http://versatilenerd.weebly.com/visual-arts-gallery.html Story about the creativity drawing: I'm inspired by mountains. Sometimes mountains are beautiful. Elegant. Whimsical. Purple majesties. Snowy. Fun. But sometimes they are beautifully dark. Elegant but no longer whimsical. Purple majesties, but the dark dominates. I love both mountains. But as soon as I saw the jagged edge of the lines, I knew it would be a dark one. At first, the mountain was a dark purple. There was nothing special about it. It was just another dark purple mountain. And it wasn't very dark, anyways. So I made a shadow. I put a (unrealistically stable) purple shard of rock, taking all the beautiful sunlight for itself. And the rocks below feeling cheated, feeling robbed, of what should have been theirs. But what that shard didn't know was that someone was reaching the light. That someone was peeking out, stretching as far as possible, and trying to catch a glimpse of light. I'd like to think that I drew this because of the story. But in reality, I made up the story because of the rocks. I saw that little guy peeking out, and I knew that that represented a child. And I thought about where my father works. He works at a university of mostly underprivileged students. They might have been the first in their families to go to college at all. My dad said (and still says) that I am better at reading, writing, mathematics, and more than most, if not all, of his students. When he first said that, I was in seventh grade. I knew that the little rock, that little guy, was one of those students, catching a small glimpse of light, stretching out of the shadow that enveloped his family, reaching the beautiful sun that would take him away from the pain. And that concludes my dramatization of my creativity drawing. XD