instead of printing it off just use this blank thing that way you dont have to scan it or anything
so fill that out by pasting it in any art program and whatnot
then save it and upload it to that site
and itll give you an option to download it
so do that and then install it BAM
I JUST GOT THIS ON MY TABLET IT’S SO COOL OH MY GOD
for some reason it refused to recognize the third page of my letters but they were all pretty unnecessary mathematic things anyway so I’m not too worried. still something to keep in mind though, I hope it doesn’t happen for you!
paintfont.com would be a good place to go to quickly make a custom font for your comic!
ehh
It looks just as horrible in real life..even worse with the letter attached…
I’ll try this later.
you can also use alternative alphabets
Welp. Guess I know what font I’m gonna be using for comics from now on. B)
Welp. Looks like I have to do this now. So I can use this for Tengri’s asks.
For some reason there is no apostrophe in my set, but it still looks cool.
this is what plays when you’re dying and your life is flashing before your eyes
*puts this on my End Of The World playlist*
Ok @peachcrushedvelvet is 100% accurate but here are several other situations I feel this beautiful creation could apply to
1. End of the world type of experience as noted above by @nero-neptune i.e. meteors falling and people running, things exploding and desperately trying to survive
2. Desperately running through your house avoiding attackers (guns, projectiles, of some type)
3. You’re in a library and you accidentally knock something over which knocks over all of the shaves domino style and you’re running down the hallway with them falling in the background.
Everybody please contribute
4. You finally experience love at first sight, but they’re in the middle of a bank heist and you’re getting caught in the cross fire
5. You’re getting arrested in roller skates at the laundromat
6. Intergalactic space travel in the form of a gay cruise
you are falling off a very tall biulding
8. A male chorus performing at the actual coronation of the actual Dancing Queen.
me: this scene is so boring i wish i could write this other scene i’m really excited about instead
brain: you can
me: explain how
brain:
Seriously I think this is one of the biggest reasons people get stuck writing a story, and I wish it was one of the first things creative writing teachers told their students. That you don’t have to write scenes chronologically, you can write whatever the hell you want, skip scenes, and then come back. I’ve been writing non-chronologically for a long, long times, and seriously I don’t know how people can write their stuff chronologically.
In fact, writing non-chronologically have extra advantages that can help make your writing stronger:
If you write non-chronologically when you go back to “fill the gaps” you actually actively work to build connections between the scenes, because you have to go from A to B and you know, so the scenes actually connect, organically, you are not just adding stuff.
You know where the story goes, so when you go back to fill the gaps you’ll find out that it’s easier to come up with the stuff that’s in between, you have a clear goal writing. This is helpful to me because I don’t do outlines (unless it’s general ones for very long stuff), because I personally find that they don’t help me come up with scenes organically. So if you don’t do outlines writing non-chronologically is a good way of paving the road for your story, of knowing where you are going at every moment.
Also! Writing non-chronologically will give you a better sense of the structure of your story, and what’s more it will help you have a stronger structure, because you set the high points (the scenes you’re excited to write) clearly.
(pfft, talk for another day but: those scenes you don’t feel like writing? the ones you want to skip? they probably shouldn’t be in the story and you should learn how to write around them)