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The following keys make good eyes, fingers, or toes.
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o O 0 ( ) c C
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eyes ----> 0 0 or (0) (0) or o o or (o) (o)
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toes -----> Oooo or Cooo
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If you get to the bottom line of your canvas and your picture is not
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finished, you can expand the canvas by hitting enter as many times
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as you need and using the space bar to prepare the canvas as you did
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when setting it up.
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If you cannot complete your drawing in one setting, type control k
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and then w. A window will open and ask you for a file name. Name the
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file. Then type ctrl a to abort the reply.
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When you're ready to resume the drawing, open the reply window from
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the j screen, then type control k and then r. When prompted for a
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file name, enter the name of your picture. It will be loaded back
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into the reply screen and you can continue.
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You can also use the above method to save a blank canvas after you
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prepare one. Then you don't have to make a new canvas for every
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drawing.
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Remember that every key on the key board can be used. Some of them
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make good shading keys. Such as @@@@@@@@@ or ######
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@@@@@@@@@ #####
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@@@@@@@ #####
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Don't be afraid to try different key combinations. If they don't
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work, experiment.
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Don't worry about pictures that don't work. I have many failures. It
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dosn't take long to realize you can't make a drawing work. I just
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give up on them.
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File: academy/tutorials/tut_veilleux.txt
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http://www.ascii-art.de/info/tut_veilleux.txt
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Normand Veilleux's ASCII Art Tutorial
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From: Normand Veilleux <nveilleu@emr1.emr.ca>
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Date: Tue, 11 Jan 1994 12:18:52 -0500 (EST)
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Several people have asked me how I do what I do (smoothing out
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pictures, etc.) First, I would like to say that I am a complete
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beginner myself. I had no drawing experience before Dec 11, 1993.
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At that time someone posted an ascii picture of Meriday (a
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professionally drawn nude, I think). I found that picture a lot
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more appealing than the GIFs I have seen or the mainframe pictures
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from my University years. Those tend to be hard the eyes from
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close up.
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Anyway, when someone else posted another nude that (I'm guessing
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here) was a cleaned up GIF. I immediately saw there was lots of
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room for improvement and I decided to give it a try. The only
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tools I had at my disposal were a PC with WordPerfect. The big
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advantage I saw with WP was that I could toggle between a normal
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view of the picture and a reduced version since WP allowed me to
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view a full page of text at once on the screen.
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In reduced format the text is actually transferred in graphics so
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that an '8' would actually appear as a black square. This gave the
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picture a rough look; the edges were all jagged. But, by
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experimenting with various character changes I soon realized that
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I could smooth out those jagged edges. I spent a lot of time
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flipping back and forth between the normal and the reduced views.
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Oh, one thing I forgot to mention. When I changed the font from
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"Courrier 10" to "Line Printer 16.67 cpi" for the LaserJet printer,
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I noticed that the jagged flaws appeared even more pronounced.
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This is why you'll see me mention once in a while that "the
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drawings I post are at their best when printed with 'Line Printer
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16.67 cpi' font or equivalent." They were worked on using that
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font. They still look very good in a regular font
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though. That's the beauty of it all.
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I still do the same thing now, only a little faster. It is a time
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consuming process and I see potential to automate some, if not a
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large portion of it. I have asked a few people on the NET if they
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knew of any software that could lighten or darken an ascii picture,
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reduce or enlarge it, etc. So far, no luck.
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I took a 15 hour bus ride (double it for the return trip) during
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the Christmas holidays up to Kapuskasing where my parents live. So
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I had some time to think about things. I came up with pseudocode
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for a program to lighten and darken a picture automatically. That
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is, if the picture is dark, it will lighten it and vice versa
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without any cumbersome parameters of any sort. It's extremely
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simple when you think about it for 3 to 4 hours. I haven't had the
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chance to program any of it yet but given a week or two it will be
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implemented.
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I also wrote pseudocode for flipping a picture horizontally, and
|
for reducing and enlarging one. These were not quite as simple but
|
it looks like it can work. If any of you out there know of
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