Big phones are the worst. I hate the supersize mentality of some humans.
Big phones are the worst. I hate the supersize mentality of some humans.
I'm not sure where you got the word that it'll lack dungeons or rely on puzzles, but it's assuredly quite the opposite. Aonuma himself has said in several interviews that he's working on revitalizing and reimagining the typical Zelda-like puzzle structure, which seems to place an even larger reliance on puzzles in the…
I don't need anyone to do it for me, that's what feminism is. Me handling my own shit.
So edgy. So artistic.
Nah. That's not a thing you get to decide.
Seriously, what is this passive aggressive shit? I mean fine use it but a "No thanks." affirms my lack of interest. I don't need anyone to do it for me, that's what feminism is. Me handling my own shit.
Cloud Approves
Those pointy bits
Visually, it looks more balanced because the lowest part of the letter is a curve and "appears" to be thicker than a flat line at the same height. If you put the curve slightly below the baseline, when paired with a flat base letter, it looks correct to the eye.
HistoryInPics scraped the image from Reddit user kibblenbits. But HistoryInPics never mentions that the photo has been colorized, nor who colorized it. The caption simply reads, "Golden Gate Bridge, 1940" leading us to believe that it's an "authentic" photo from 1940.
Colorizing is evil. Everyone knows the past was in black and white.
This one of Mark Twain always blows my mind. It's like it was taken yesterday.
Colorizing older photos is simply wrong. The world was not in color then, and it's misleading to pretend it was.
I find amusing that a Gawker blog somehow has a problem with misstatements and false facts.
IMO, you could look at it as rewriting history to a degree. On the other hand, when you look at an older black and white picture, especially a famous one or maybe one of someone you knew/know, don't you try to imagine what it looked like in color, anyway? I do. I guess I just sort of view it as an artist's…
I colored 4 pictures of my grandparents as Christmas present last year. They were shot between 1950-55 when they started to travel again and Germany started to be functioning again after the war. On screen you could tell they were colored. But when printed out no one could tell. I put them in a frame as present. When…
""My only concern would be that nobody should see color versions as 'better' than black and white originals in any way," Alan Taylor at The Atlantic tells me. "They may seem more relatable, or tickle some part of the brain that itches to fill in the gaps left by monochrome images, but they are definitely…
If I'm being honest, the fact that the letter started with "Lyndon Johnson is president, we are hopeful that the Republicans will be in office when this time capsule is recovered" kept me from crying. I'm a bleeding-heart liberal robot.
Awful photoshop, but here is a double decker race that really happened.