These impressive 4,550 year old elaborate adornments covered the body of Queen Puabi in the Royal Cemetery at Ur in Sumer, present-day Iraq.
The strands of beads, created of precious metals and semiprecious stones, are just jaw droppingly beautiful.
Penn Museum
Credit: @Dr_TheHistories
#inspo
The strands of beads, created of precious metals and semiprecious stones, are just jaw droppingly beautiful.
Penn Museum
Credit: @Dr_TheHistories
#inspo
Replica of the helmet from the Sutton Hoo ship-burial 1, early 7th century. England. Image: British Museum. The Sutton Hoo helmet was buried around 625 and is widely believed to have been the helmet of King Rædwald of East Anglia.
Credit: @archaeologyart
#inspo
Credit: @archaeologyart
#inspo
"Talking about straight against curves with some students and wanted to share some examples. Often, placing straight lines against curved can make a design more dynamic. You can dial up or down the contrast depending on how graphic/ dynamic you want your design to be. For “The Secret of Kells,”Tomm Moore, and Ross Stewart developed the visual language with Barry Reynolds. The stronger/harder characters would often have more straights, and more contrast in straight vs curves. Weaker/ softer character would often have more curves and less contrast. Though Tomm admits that much of this is intuitive. Posing and drawing characters until they feel right."
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02JpA4SkuG5wQ2erYbNJ5NsaGjRzAFuy4zNG6wY4RmHKVFjHKJ8iUHGhkorL72Met6l&id=565854656
#characterdesignref
#animationref
https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid02JpA4SkuG5wQ2erYbNJ5NsaGjRzAFuy4zNG6wY4RmHKVFjHKJ8iUHGhkorL72Met6l&id=565854656
#characterdesignref
#animationref