altararess:

nachotypicalbromance:

colonelstarstorm:

gingerhaole:

shuraiya:

Actually, that can be explained with ~SCIENCE~

The sketchiness of line art mimics the natural lack of clarity in our peripheral vision. When we look at the real world, our high definition fovea can only focus on a small area at a time. By having a very clean line art, it creates the unnatural feel of high clarity over a large area that’s not possible when we look at real life, therefore line art tends to appear stiff and not as appealing as the sketch. This sketichiness technique was first utilized by impressionists to create an optical illusion of motion (along with other techniques like equiluminance).

Source: Vision and Art: The Biology of Seeing by Margaret Livingston

Reblogging for an interesting bit of SCIENCE.

Fuck me, I KNEW there was a reason! FUCK YOU, SCIENCE, YOU ASSHOLE

EVERYTHING CAN BE EXPLAINED WITH SCIENCE

SCIENCE! WHAT CAN’T IT DO!

I feel as if I just found a last piece of a puzzle O.O Science of course! Science!

HAHAHA I AM JUSTIFIED.

I’m just going to stop cleaning up the scrawliness when I do lineart.  I never like it as much after, anyway.

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