Do any of you remember how I made more precise Fraction Friend bodies for this project? https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/1311869165/ Well, I used this special ruler to color them in! Made using Adobe Illustrator's Gradient editors, I put color stop at very specific points. They cover everything visible from 1% to 100%! Here's the stop points. 1% - Light Red 1.111% - Medium Grey 1.25% - Pale Pink 1.43% - Pale Violet 1.6% - Pale Indigo 2% - Pale Blue 2.5% - Pale Green 3.33% - Pale yellow 5% - Pale Orange 10% - White 11.111% - Dark Grey 12.5% - Pink 14.286% - Violet 16.666% - Indigo 20% - Blue 25% - Green 30% - Lime 33.333% - Yellow 40% - Amber 50% - Orange 62.5% - Tangerine 75% - Vermillion 87.5% - Scarlet 90% - Itsuki Nakano 100% - Red Given how Integer Numberblocks get their color, non-whole Numberblocks such as the fraction friends get their colors like this. One example is that 22.222% is a Very Greenish Cyan. Actually, many people debate on wether Numberblock 5 is supposed to be either blue or cyan. I mean, the chracters always say it's blue (Ref. 7's debut, or On your Head where 15 says "5 blue one-blocks" or even in Grid Games Galore 54 & 56 say they have 5 BLUE tens), but since Colourblocks is a thing, cyan is a more close match. To build a basic pallete, it's always good to refer to Numberblocks 7 8 and 9 because they carry the 11 basic colors. (Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet, Pibk, Light Grey, Medium Grey, Dark Grey) Keep in mind that every non-violet block on 7 might sometimes look a bit different in saturation from the color's original holder.
c2a Nothing special going on right now. I'm currently not starting a new anime right now. That's because I want a clean slate for when Season 3 of 100 Girlfriends airs after 4th of July. (Hey! Miss Naddy's favorite holiday! She's the patriotic GF because there were 13 colonies, and she's the 13th in line!) Okay, maybe I might've read a few randomly-picked chapters out of order, but that's only because I need some tastes of what to expect. (Not to mention that sometimes chapters are either cut or rearranged.) But hey, at least the panel arrangement's helping me get a good idea of which direction to start from. (Right-to-left orientation)