Rohka's Code Rodeo

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Here's the place to find information on 'How do I do that?' when it comes to creating avatars, signatures, calculating travel time or big purchases, or even working with the bbc code. There are help files for codework for both the main board forums and the lore sections. There are threads advertising players that are willing to create signatures for other players. Please feel free to discuss technical issues, photo cropping, suggest new bbc code, or get help from players and admins on things you want to do. This forum includes posts, wiki technical aid, avatar art, character sheet art, signature work, and all things visual when it comes to Mizahar.

Rohka's Code Rodeo

Postby Rohka on July 14th, 2019, 12:57 am

This is a space to place creations.

Updates coming soon.
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Rohka
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Rohka's Code Rodeo

Postby Rohka on July 14th, 2019, 1:13 am

I found a css thing called background-blend-mode which was fun to play with. Used it to blend the jaguar pic with the background for this:

Image
Timestamp AV

Far far away, behind the word mountains, far from the countries Vokalia and Consonantia, there live the blind texts. Separated they live in Bookmarksgrove right at the coast of the Semantics, a large language ocean. A small river named Duden flows by their place and supplies it with the necessary regelialia. It is a paradisematic country, in which roasted parts of sentences fly into your mouth.

Even the all-powerful Pointing has no control about the blind texts. It is an almost unorthographic life. One day however a small line of blind text by the name of Lorem Ipsum decided to leave for the far World of Grammar. The Big Oxmox advised her not to do so, because there were thousands of bad Commas, wild Question Marks and devious Semikoli, but the Little Blind Text didn’t listen. She packed her seven versalia, put her initial into the belt and made herself on the way. When she reached the first hills of the Italic Mountains, she had a last view back on the skyline of her hometown Bookmarksgrove, the headline of Alphabet Village and the subline of her own road, the Line Lane. (Courtesy of blindtextgenerator.com/lorem-ipsum)

Alexander Slade


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[style=max-width:650px; margin:auto; background-repeat: no-repeat, repeat; background-image: url(http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=63078), url(http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=63073); background-blend-mode: luminosity; color: #e0e0e0; padding: 25px; text-shadow: 2px 2px 3px black; box-shadow: 0px 0px 30px black; margin-top: 40px; margin-bottom: 40px; border:1px solid #f0f0f0; text-align: justify;][img2=left]http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=63074[/img2][googlefont=Julee][size=200][right]Timestamp AV[/right][/size][/googlefont]
[googlefont=Raleway]Far far away, behind the word mountains, far from the countries Vokalia and Consonantia, there live the blind texts. Separated they live in Bookmarksgrove right at the coast of the Semantics, a large language ocean. A small river named Duden flows by their place and supplies it with the necessary regelialia. It is a paradisematic country, in which roasted parts of sentences fly into your mouth.

Even the all-powerful Pointing has no control about the blind texts. It is an almost unorthographic life. One day however a small line of blind text by the name of Lorem Ipsum decided to leave for the far World of Grammar. The Big Oxmox advised her not to do so, because there were thousands of bad Commas, wild Question Marks and devious Semikoli, but the Little Blind Text didn’t listen. She packed her seven versalia, put her initial into the belt and made herself on the way. When she reached the first hills of the Italic Mountains, she had a last view back on the skyline of her hometown Bookmarksgrove, the headline of Alphabet Village and the subline of her own road, the Line Lane. (Courtesy of blindtextgenerator.com/lorem-ipsum)[/googlefont]
[googlefont=Julee][size=200][right]Alexander Slade[/right][/size][/googlefont][/style]
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Rohka
So?
 
Posts: 426
Words: 428949
Joined roleplay: May 24th, 2013, 5:28 pm
Location: Zeltiva
Race: Human
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Rohka's Code Rodeo

Postby Rohka on March 2nd, 2021, 11:12 pm

Making some boxcodes for fun to give. Feel free to edit and use whatever is below however you want, but if you want to claim something as your own, just send me a PM. The background image is seamless (which means it won't create a terrible edge when the image repeats in the background... still figuring out the best way to do this...), and it was originally a non-seamless image from unsplash. If you want a different seamless image made out of a pattern you like, let me know.


The Jungle Book - An Excerpt

At last—and Mother Wolf's neck-bristles lifted as the time came—Father Wolf pushed "Mowgli the Frog," as they called him, into the center, where he sat laughing and playing with some pebbles that glistened in the moonlight.

Akela never raised his head from his paws, but went on with the monotonous cry: "Look well!" A muffled roar came up from behind the rocks—the voice of Shere Khan crying: "The cub is mine. Give him to me. What have the Free People to do with a man's cub?" Akela never even twitched his ears: all he said was: "Look well, O Wolves! What have the Free People to do with the orders of any save the Free People? Look well!"

There was a chorus of deep growls, and a young wolf in his fourth year flung back Shere Khan's question to Akela: "What have the Free People to do with a man's cub?" Now the Law of the Jungle lays down that if there is any dispute as to the right of a cub to be accepted by the Pack, he must be spoken for by at least two members of the Pack who are not his father and mother.

"Who speaks for this cub?" said Akela. "Among the Free People who speaks?" There was no answer, and Mother Wolf got ready for what she knew would be her last fight, if things came to fighting.

Then the only other creature who is allowed at the Pack Council—Baloo, the sleepy brown bear who teaches the wolf cubs the Law of the Jungle: old Baloo, who can come and go where he pleases because he eats only nuts and roots and honey—rose up on his hind quarters and grunted.

"The man's cub—the man's cub?" he said. "I speak for the man's cub. There is no harm in a man's cub. I have no gift of words, but I speak the truth. Let him run with the Pack, and be entered with the others. I myself will teach him."


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[style=max-width:600px; padding:40px; border:8px solid #141115; background-image:url(http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=64643); margin:auto; color:#141115; text-align:justify; font-family:ITC Stone Serif;][style2=width:550px; padding:20px; margin:auto; background-color:oldlace;][center][googlefont=Rye][size=200]Title[/size][/center][/googlefont]
Text[/style2][/style]


The boxcode below has been claimed.


Notes from A Dead House - An Excerpt

"Our prison stood at the edge of the fortress, right by the fortress rampart. You could look at God’s world through the chinks in the fence: wouldn’t you see at least something? But all you could see was a strip of sky and a high earthen rampart overgrown with weeds, and on the wall sentries pacing up and down day and night, and right then you would think that years would go by, and you would come in the same way to look through the chinks in the fence and see the same rampart, the same sentries, and the same little strip of sky, not the sky over the prison, but a different, far-off, free sky. Picture to yourself a large yard, some two hundred paces long and a hundred and fifty wide, surrounded on all sides, in the form of an irregular hexagon, by a high stockade, that is, a fence of high posts (palings) dug deeply into the ground, their ribs pressed firmly against each other, fastened together by crosswise planks, and sharpened at the tips: this was the outer wall of the prison. On one side of the wall sturdy gates had been set in, always locked, always guarded day and night by sentries; they were opened on demand to let people out to work. Beyond those gates was the bright, free world; people lived like everybody else. But on this side of the wall, you pictured that world as some sort of impossible fairy tale. Here you were in a special world, unlike anything else; it had its own special laws, its own clothing, its own morals and customs, an alive dead house, a life like nowhere else, and special people. It is this special corner that I am setting out to describe."

-Fyodor Dostoevsky; Translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky


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[style=max-width:600px; padding:40px; border:8px solid #141115; background-image:url(http://www.mizahar.com/forums/gallery/pic.php?mode=large&pic_id=64644); margin:auto; color:#e8e8e8; text-align:justify; font-family:ITC Stone Serif][style2=width:550px; padding:20px; margin:auto; background-color:darkslategray; box-shadow:0px 0px 20px black;][center][googlefont=Uncial Antiqua][size=150]Title[/size][/center][/googlefont]
Text[/style2][/style]
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Rohka
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Posts: 426
Words: 428949
Joined roleplay: May 24th, 2013, 5:28 pm
Location: Zeltiva
Race: Human
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