User:Red-back spider
Red-back spider (talk · contributions · Statistics · Recent activity · block log · User rights log · uploads · Global account information)
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Hi everybody, my username is Red-back spider.
History
[edit]I am now way better at copyright than the time I had about 50 edits. I started doing Wikimedia Commons when I was eight and I'm still doing so. I have about 700 edits.
I made a few templates for talk pages using the code from Wikipedia for that template.
Templates?
[edit]If you want any templates made, then ask me! Please leave a firm description of what it looks like, what it's called and why you want it.
Awards
[edit]I'm not showing off.
The Copyright Watcher's Barnstar | |
Hi! Appreciate brilliant template ideas and looking after copyright violations. Also, thank you for the memorable photos. Keep up the great work. :) Gryllida (talk) 05:14, 4 June 2020 (UTC) |
Other
[edit]
Picture of the day
English: The Scroll of Eighty-Seven Immortals, drawn by an unknown painter, measuring 30cm high and 292cm wide, is a line-drawing Chinese figure painting. Drawn on a long silk scroll with lines, the painting depicts 87 taoist immortals, including three supreme gods with halo, ten divine generals, seven deities and 67 celestial maidens marching from the right to the left on the bridge. The painting manifests the momentum of the glorious age of Tang Dynasty and was regarded by Xu Beihong as a work of Wu Daozi. Xie Zhiliu ang Chang Dai-chien thought that the painting style of the scroll was simlilar to that in Dung Huang frescoes of later Tang Dynasty and attributed it to Later Tang Dynasty (923–937), while a noted painting and calligraphy connoisseur, Xu Bangda, thought it should be drawn by a Southern Song dynasty (1127–1279) painter. |
References and notes
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