@tiandyu: How to draw Ghost from Call of Duty! Who should I draw next? #art #artistsoftiktok #ghostcod #simonriley #callofduty #drawing #tutorials how to draw ghost Simon Riley call of duty art drawing tutorial

Tiandyu
Tiandyu
Open In TikTok:
Region: GB
Sunday 06 April 2025 00:09:44 GMT
264000
35449
525
1977

Music

Download

Comments

farher_herbert
Herbert :
That ain’t ghost btw
2025-04-11 05:32:18
5
tiandyu
Tiandyu :
Who next? 🙏
2025-04-06 00:30:38
65
cod_edits222
•ᴗ• 𝒞𝒶𝓁𝓁 ℴ𝒻 𝒹𝓊𝓉𝓎 •ᴗ• :
Watches. Trys. Fails very badly. Gives up.
2025-04-08 19:42:01
1391
im.dumb.idk
†✝︎Jxseph✝︎† :
Ima try and draw this I love cod
2025-04-06 00:38:57
399
roze48190
ROZE💓🫶 :
q bonito ver cómo dibujan a mi esposo💓💓
2025-05-17 16:30:28
59
camiamaasimonriley
𝒞am🍓 :
ay ghost se te cayo algo déjame lo recogogogogo🥺
2025-04-10 16:47:35
376
simonghostriley971
️ :
Y ESE GUAPO?
2025-04-10 05:42:01
128
selinka.b
𝒮𝑒𝓁𝒾𝓃𝒶🫧 :
Yessss🔥🔥🔥
2025-04-06 09:14:00
5
adoremia.aaa
adoremia.aaa :
i drew this in school and the boys looked at me like im a pick me ahh
2025-04-08 18:47:21
98
solerash
S0lr3sh :
early can he respond?
2025-04-06 00:14:54
8
rina44299
Rina Meadows :
Easy? EASY?!
2025-04-13 04:03:45
31
remee420
𒉭Crash Out𒉭 :
imagine that being tha last thing you ever see
2025-04-06 17:08:40
120
_reid_obsessed_
~Bella~ ✝️ :
For some reason, I ALWAYS mess up his balaclava lol
2025-05-18 15:13:54
1
jackjszszlq
Yoboyjohnjack✝️ :
W drawing 🙏
2025-04-06 00:20:36
7
miragbyej3r
🤷‍♀️ :
Точно изи?
2025-04-09 18:23:00
189
ghostiedewaflesito
𐔌 𝑺aori ౨ৎ 𝓖host ꒱ :
Ya tengo el video, ahora me falta saber dibujar
2025-04-11 20:24:54
46
simon._.riley1
GHOST :
Aquí GHOST estoy de regreso
2025-05-20 05:48:29
1
mr.subway7
† 𝔡άᶰᶤεL𖣂 †DE𝙻☹︎𝙴A :
FIRSTTT
2025-04-06 00:13:10
1
ghost47652
Monarch 81 :
красавчик просто красавчик
2025-05-23 09:23:52
18
callsignolie
Callsign:Ollie :
I attempted and he looks like he’s on the verge of insanity 😭
2025-04-11 03:19:20
20
just0jayy
🫧 𝒥𝑜𝓈𝒾𝑒 🫧 :
saving this for when i’m bored in philosophy 😭💕
2025-04-06 04:50:47
73
fatimoranaranjin_3
Minirubi_fatimoruv🍓 :
sigo esperando lo fácil😔
2025-05-30 22:18:35
4
_.dragonite_argentino._
★~{Dragonite_Argentino}~★ :
Menos mal que era fácil😊
2025-05-26 12:55:58
13
vieyaaa_
trish⁷ :
"how to draw simon ghost riley" wdym? he's not real??
2025-06-01 05:21:35
1
_olinitka_
_✨️Olnitka✨️_ :
If that's easy I want see hard
2025-04-11 12:05:42
5
To see more videos from user @tiandyu, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

When I can’t figure out how to help my kid during a meltdown, I imagine I’m a firefighter trying to calm a panicked person in a burning building. Gentle parenting encourages us to offer choices, but timing matters. Have you ever tried giving a choice mid-meltdown? It doesn’t go well. That’s because they’re in survival mode, not in the part of the brain that can think clearly. It’s like asking someone in a burning building which exit they’d prefer while you’re trying to rescue them. The time for choices is before the fire. If a child is holding a candle, that’s when you ask, “Do you want to blow it out or should I?” Not when the room is already filled with smoke. Sometimes the meltdown happens because of something they did wrong, and we feel pressure to correct it right away. But meltdown mode is not teachable mode. You can’t build new skills in the middle of panic. And yes, it’s hard to stay calm when your kid falls apart over the blue plate instead of the green one. We know it’s not that serious. But to their brain, it feels like a real emergency. The first step is taking that feeling seriously. Taking them seriously doesn’t mean letting them spiral. It means stepping in with calm and confidence. We take control of the moment, not with force but with steady presence. We offer simple, grounding directions. We help them reconnect with their senses and move from the back of their brain to the front. And doing this looks different for every kid. Grounding and bringing them back to the front. Half of their brain is really specific to their own personality. Sometimes you just have to try things out until you figure it out.  But the goal is always modeling calm and reconnecting to the front half of their brain. All the offering of choices and lesson learning can wait until they are regulated. #kelsewhatelse #howtotalktolittlekids
When I can’t figure out how to help my kid during a meltdown, I imagine I’m a firefighter trying to calm a panicked person in a burning building. Gentle parenting encourages us to offer choices, but timing matters. Have you ever tried giving a choice mid-meltdown? It doesn’t go well. That’s because they’re in survival mode, not in the part of the brain that can think clearly. It’s like asking someone in a burning building which exit they’d prefer while you’re trying to rescue them. The time for choices is before the fire. If a child is holding a candle, that’s when you ask, “Do you want to blow it out or should I?” Not when the room is already filled with smoke. Sometimes the meltdown happens because of something they did wrong, and we feel pressure to correct it right away. But meltdown mode is not teachable mode. You can’t build new skills in the middle of panic. And yes, it’s hard to stay calm when your kid falls apart over the blue plate instead of the green one. We know it’s not that serious. But to their brain, it feels like a real emergency. The first step is taking that feeling seriously. Taking them seriously doesn’t mean letting them spiral. It means stepping in with calm and confidence. We take control of the moment, not with force but with steady presence. We offer simple, grounding directions. We help them reconnect with their senses and move from the back of their brain to the front. And doing this looks different for every kid. Grounding and bringing them back to the front. Half of their brain is really specific to their own personality. Sometimes you just have to try things out until you figure it out. But the goal is always modeling calm and reconnecting to the front half of their brain. All the offering of choices and lesson learning can wait until they are regulated. #kelsewhatelse #howtotalktolittlekids

About