very nice!!
have you tried having an entry at the snout, and then an exit hole at the other end. You know, kind of like those mazes in kids colouring books.
really? I don't see why. even if the actual size on the shirt was the size of the smaller color examples above, you could clearly see everything thats going on, and that would be very small.
and I'm really excited to see it, I was watching animal planet yesterday and thinking about how underappreciated anteaters are - thank you for giving them their time to shine
there are none en-route...there are only ants in their acidy demise and ants unaware of the treacherous path to come. you need midpoint ants. and yes, one sneaking out the back door yelling "I'm free, I'm free"...or just a fart cloud blowing a few out.
you have to accept that it takes zero for people to get turned off to an image. position, a minor detail. things that they SHOULD know you can't change (according to the submission guidelines) - and things that realistically could be altered easily for the final product. look at how often threadless themselves will change the color scheme in their print from original submissions. why don't they bother to think of this stuff?
these people don't know, apparently don't want to know, and really aren't in any position to gauge the caliber of a submission in regards to tiny very specific details, but what can you do? not a thing.
everyone wants to be a critic, too often they are philistines.
but on the subject of the blog, picking a good color choice in your presentation and presenting your good design well shows a heightened sense of aesthetics that can push you into that printable range.
but on the subject of the blog, picking a good color choice in your presentation and presenting your good design well shows a heightened sense of aesthetics that can push you into that printable range. in short, color choice does matter, even though threadless isn't tied down to the color you choose.
have you tried having an entry at the snout, and then an exit hole at the other end. You know, kind of like those mazes in kids colouring books.