Y’ever read something and have understanding that has eluded you interminably suddenly stop, curl up, and snuggle neatly into a fold in your brain because a new way way opened to it?
I've seen this passed around a few times, and I have one thing to say:
It's online. The book was carefully and wonderfully recreated online by hand. You can find it here. The entire book is this easy.
GUYS. GUYS.
GUYS.
HOLY FUCK.
That means free access to Photoshop CS2 - and that already has most of what you could ask for, really.
All you have to do is create a FREE ADOBE ID.
I am not sure about commercial use, but MAN. FUCKIN’ SWEET DUDE
Reblogging for the greater good.
I’m unlikely to pick it up as I honestly never use PS anymore, but here everyone who follows me. Free stuff.
oh wow this is perfect i was just lamenting that i’d have to buy creative suite for my new laptop WELP
Signal boost for any of my followers who need art programs!
The cs2 programs date back only a few years, and still have much of the functionality of today’s more modern ones. The differences between most of the versions are little more than slight modifications or additions of minor features, and UI changes. Go for it guys!!
Also, in case the page is down, here are the download links + serials.
video essays about horror, fear and dread
- Films That Feel Like Bad Dreams
- The Nightmare Artist
- Fear of Big Things Underwater
- Control, Anatomy, and the Legacy of the Haunted House
- House of Leaves: The Horror Of Fiction
- Monsters in the Closet: A History of LGBT Representation in Horror Cinema
- The History of Insane Asylums and Horror Movies
- The Saddest Horror Movie You’ve Never Seen
- Fear of Forgetting
- Slender Man: Misunderstanding Ten Years Of The Internet
- The Real Reason The Thing (1982) is Better than The Thing (2011)
- The Bizarre Clown Painting No One Fully Understands
- The Little Book of Cosmic Horrors
- The Disturbing Art of A.I.
- Fear of Depths
- Goya’s Witches
- David Lynch: The Treachery of Language
- The True History That Created Folk Horror
- The Existential Horror of David Cronenberg’s Camera