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How to Draw yourself Stepping in a Puddle and Splashing your Friends

Posted on July 29, 2025 by Zipper7777

This easy, step-by-step cartoon caricature drawing tutorial will help you to do just that! All you will need is a pen, pencil, or marker, a sheet of paper, and some crayons or colored pencils. Learn to draw clouds and falling rain. If you liked this drawing tutorial, see also the following guides: Umbrella drawing, Rain drawing, and Peppa Pig drawing. Join now and get immediate access to thousands of printable drawing instruction and practice pages! Learn how to get access to thousands of printable pages! Still seeing ads or not being able to download the PDF? First, check that you’re logged in. You can log in on the member login page. If you’re still not able to download the PDF, the likely solution is to reload the page. You can do this by clicking the browser reload button. We’ve been creating high-quality, easy-to-follow drawing tutorials since 2016. Rauno and the team of experienced artists are dedicated to helping people of all ages and skill levels learn to draw. We’ve carefully crafted over 1,900 step-by-step tutorials, ensuring that each one is safe, beginner-friendly, and engaging. We expand our library with new drawing guides every week, adding more drawing ideas and staying up-to-date with new trends.

“The best way to use weight factor is in combination with the fill power because more down with a lesser fill power can be warmer than a higher fill power that has less down in the coat,” says Tanya Domina, a professor of fashion merchandising and design at Central Michigan University. “The higher the fill power, the better the insulation will be, but that is affected by how much of the down is in the product by weight. Not every retailer will tell you the down fill power of a coat; even fewer will tell you the weight. The best thing to do in this situation is, quite simply, to ask. Email customer service, or if you live in an area with a decent store that carries winter coats, walk in and chat with the associates at the shop. If you can’t or don’t want to talk to anyone (or if the folks working the place don’t know the particulars of down), you can evaluate a coat by its poofiness.

That the audience shares this sense of shock and disbelief at the film’s extremes certainly adds to its humour. But it also serves as a reminder that this is Only A Film – setting it apart from other romcoms in its relative emotional distance. The Cat Ballou-style musical plot updates from Farrelly regular Jonathan Richman and the end credits in which the entire cast sing along to Build Me Up, Buttercup, fulfil the same purpose. That There’s Something About Mary manages to be fairly light on emotion, yet distinctly memorable, is a tribute to the force of its comic structure. It wears its influences (from the Marx Brothers to Porky’s) on its sleeve, but wraps them in a tight, original plot where every joke has a purpose as well as a punchline. Making such a film in 1998 also opened up the opportunity to exploit the knowing, post-PC humour that the MTV generation so embraced (later echoed somewhat less successfully in the Farrellys’ Me, Myself And Irene). You only have to look at American Pie and Road Trip to see the influence it’s had on the teen movie. There’s Something About Mary brought the gross-out flick out of the grubby toilet cubicle of frat boy lite, and into the shiny, blue-skied world of romantic comedy where goodness is (finally) rewarded and dreams really do come true. It’s just that the Farrelly brothers’ dreams are that bit naughtier than most.

If you spend as much time writing and travelling as I do, you understand the importance, not only of great sound, but also the portability of a good set of headphones. Over the years I’ve swapped in and out of full sized can headphones, earbuds, and everything in between, but there are always tradeoffs. If I use my noise-cancelling headphones I can block out everyone on the plane and immerse myself in whatever media I’ve chosen, but they come in a bulky hard case that eats up a lot of space in my carryon. If I go with the earbuds they are obviously compact, but over a long flight they begin to hurt my ears, and they simply don’t match the richness of sound of a pair of cans. As one of the drivers died on my current pair of headphones, it was time to find a replacement. After a bit of research I stumbled upon a company called V-MODA. Endorsements aside (though there are quite a few from such names as Paul Oakenfold and The Crystal Method), the company promised unparalleled design, an extremely compact form factor, and modularity to boot.

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