Hi!
Personally, I love both drawing and perspective. So I <em>may</em> be able to help.
I think what your trying to convey here is that your bedroom drawings look dull and flat. I will do my best to assist you!
My favorite way to make anything pop is to add <em>perspective</em>, and you mention the fact that you find perspective hard to grasp.
[INSERT VIDXO HERE]
<em>(lxnk not provided due to the increase in lxnk bots, i dont wanna get my account deleted so just search up on yxutxbe "how to draw perspective" and cIick the one that appeals to you the most"</em>
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When I was a beginner artist, this vidxo definitely helped me a lot and I recommend you check it out. It mentions certain topics that I personally found really hard to grasp, and this video made me feel more confident about the subject.
Hope this helps! c:
Answer:
piccolo (fourth movement only), 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets in B flat and C, 2 bassoons, contrabassoon (fourth movement only), 2 horns in E flat and C, 2 trumpets, 3 trombones (alto, tenor, and bass, fourth movement only), timpani (in G-C) and strings.
Explanation:
Syncopation is often used in jazz settings.
B) herman von helmholtz
The trichromatic color theory<span> began in the 18th century, when </span>Thomas Young<span> proposed that color vision was a result of three different </span>photoreceptor cells<span>. </span>Hermann von Helmholtz<span> later expanded on Young's ideas using color-matching experiments which showed that people with normal vision needed three wavelengths to create the normal range of colors. Physiological evidence for trichromatic theory was later given by </span>Gunnar Svaetichin<span> (1956).</span>