Here are some of the details, or sites I used to help me get here: This is the intersection of video game nerd, computer nerd, and being somewhat craft-inclined. It's so perfect! Don't tell me you're not somewhat jealous. Imagine that thing on some black fabric, so it looks like it's doing that zoom in/out thing that it does at the end of a level. Here is a super simple scene I was hoping to recreate (at original, and magnified sizes): so I could make a counted cross stitch pattern of one of my favorite levels in Super Mario World - Vanilla Dome 3. I wanted to recreate the following scene (at the exact pixel count). Why did I care/notice to begin with? Now we're going to get to an even smaller niche. I love that video game sprites are available online, but somebody had to extract all of them at some point. Some of you are going to ask (as my wife has, repeatedly), "Why?" Because there was a hole in the internet, and I wanted to give something back. This is nerdy, and a rather small niche to care about. Use the PNGs that I showed first to get the actual sprites) gif's, so don't use them for pixel accuracy:Īnd lastly, just to show you that it actually works, here are the various pieces put together, to form some random thing, which I think uses them all: Here they are, in the same order (top to bottom), and you can see which element you want. You might not know which piece you want, so I thought an animation would be helpful. ![]() ![]() Both are PNGs, so there won't be any loss of quality, regardless. One has a background color, and one has a transparent background.
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