Having arrows entering and leaving at different points on a single node
I wish to essentially remake the below image using TikZ, but with more colors and using a different language inside the boxes.
I've tried the following:
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows}
% Define block styles
tikzstyle{HOTRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{COLDRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{line} = [draw, -latex']
tikzstyle{cloud} = [draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em]
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw [line] (HOT) -- (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD);
draw [line] (COLD) -- (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
which produces this picture:
I just don't know how to achieve the effect of having arrows (that can just be simple TikZ arrows) leaving and entering the same node at different points, so that all of the arrows in the last picture were vertical. How could I achieve this effect with relative ease?
tikz-pgf tikz-arrows tikz-node
add a comment |
I wish to essentially remake the below image using TikZ, but with more colors and using a different language inside the boxes.
I've tried the following:
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows}
% Define block styles
tikzstyle{HOTRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{COLDRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{line} = [draw, -latex']
tikzstyle{cloud} = [draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em]
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw [line] (HOT) -- (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD);
draw [line] (COLD) -- (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
which produces this picture:
I just don't know how to achieve the effect of having arrows (that can just be simple TikZ arrows) leaving and entering the same node at different points, so that all of the arrows in the last picture were vertical. How could I achieve this effect with relative ease?
tikz-pgf tikz-arrows tikz-node
Just a few seconds.
– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago
add a comment |
I wish to essentially remake the below image using TikZ, but with more colors and using a different language inside the boxes.
I've tried the following:
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows}
% Define block styles
tikzstyle{HOTRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{COLDRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{line} = [draw, -latex']
tikzstyle{cloud} = [draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em]
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw [line] (HOT) -- (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD);
draw [line] (COLD) -- (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
which produces this picture:
I just don't know how to achieve the effect of having arrows (that can just be simple TikZ arrows) leaving and entering the same node at different points, so that all of the arrows in the last picture were vertical. How could I achieve this effect with relative ease?
tikz-pgf tikz-arrows tikz-node
I wish to essentially remake the below image using TikZ, but with more colors and using a different language inside the boxes.
I've tried the following:
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows}
% Define block styles
tikzstyle{HOTRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{COLDRES} = [rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em]
tikzstyle{line} = [draw, -latex']
tikzstyle{cloud} = [draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em]
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw [line] (HOT) -- (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD);
draw [line] (COLD) -- (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
which produces this picture:
I just don't know how to achieve the effect of having arrows (that can just be simple TikZ arrows) leaving and entering the same node at different points, so that all of the arrows in the last picture were vertical. How could I achieve this effect with relative ease?
tikz-pgf tikz-arrows tikz-node
tikz-pgf tikz-arrows tikz-node
edited 1 hour ago
asked 2 hours ago
TheSodesa
997
997
Just a few seconds.
– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Just a few seconds.
– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago
Just a few seconds.
– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
Just a few seconds.
– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
It is very simple, if you use the coordinate (nodea -| nodeb)
you have the y coordinate of nodea and the x coordinate of nodeb.
Off-topic: see also Should tikzset or tikzstyle be used to define TikZ styles?.
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows.meta}
% Define block styles
tikzset{
HOTRES/.style={
rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
COLDRES/.style ={
rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20, text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
line/.style = {draw, -Latex},
cloud/.style = {
draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em
}
}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw (HOT.south -| HOT->COLD) -- (HOT->COLD.north);
draw [line] (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD.north -| HOT->COLD);
draw (COLD.north -| COLD->HOT) -- (COLD->HOT);
draw [line] (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT.south -| COLD->HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
documentclass[border = 5pt]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
usetikzlibrary{shadows.blur}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[
reserv/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = white,
rounded corners = 5pt,
minimum width = 6cm,
minimum height = 1cm, inner sep = 1pt,
drop shadow
},
proc/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = black,
circle,
minimum size = 1.5cm,
drop shadow, inner sep = 1pt,
},
arrow/.style = {
line width = 1mm, draw = gray!30, >=latex
}
]
node[reserv=red] (HOT) at (0, 0){$T_textrm{HOT}$};
node[proc=yellow] (M) at (-2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_M$};
node[proc=yellow] (L) at ( 2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_L$};
node[reserv=blue] (COLD) at (0, -6){$T_textrm{COLD}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (HOT.south -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (HOT.south -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$displaystyle{frac{eta_M}{eta_L}}Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (COLD.north -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$(1 - eta_M)Q$};
draw[arrow, ->] (COLD.north -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$eta_M Qdisplaystyle{left(frac{1}{eta_L} - 1right)}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (M) -- (L) node[below, midway]{$eta_M Q$};
node[left = 0.1cm of M, black, align = center] {More\efficient};
node[right = 0.1cm of L, black, align = center] {Less\efficient};
node[above = 1cm] at ($(M)!0.5!(L)$){$eta_M geq eta_L$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It is very simple, if you use the coordinate (nodea -| nodeb)
you have the y coordinate of nodea and the x coordinate of nodeb.
Off-topic: see also Should tikzset or tikzstyle be used to define TikZ styles?.
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows.meta}
% Define block styles
tikzset{
HOTRES/.style={
rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
COLDRES/.style ={
rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20, text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
line/.style = {draw, -Latex},
cloud/.style = {
draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em
}
}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw (HOT.south -| HOT->COLD) -- (HOT->COLD.north);
draw [line] (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD.north -| HOT->COLD);
draw (COLD.north -| COLD->HOT) -- (COLD->HOT);
draw [line] (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT.south -| COLD->HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
It is very simple, if you use the coordinate (nodea -| nodeb)
you have the y coordinate of nodea and the x coordinate of nodeb.
Off-topic: see also Should tikzset or tikzstyle be used to define TikZ styles?.
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows.meta}
% Define block styles
tikzset{
HOTRES/.style={
rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
COLDRES/.style ={
rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20, text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
line/.style = {draw, -Latex},
cloud/.style = {
draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em
}
}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw (HOT.south -| HOT->COLD) -- (HOT->COLD.north);
draw [line] (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD.north -| HOT->COLD);
draw (COLD.north -| COLD->HOT) -- (COLD->HOT);
draw [line] (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT.south -| COLD->HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
It is very simple, if you use the coordinate (nodea -| nodeb)
you have the y coordinate of nodea and the x coordinate of nodeb.
Off-topic: see also Should tikzset or tikzstyle be used to define TikZ styles?.
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows.meta}
% Define block styles
tikzset{
HOTRES/.style={
rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
COLDRES/.style ={
rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20, text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
line/.style = {draw, -Latex},
cloud/.style = {
draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em
}
}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw (HOT.south -| HOT->COLD) -- (HOT->COLD.north);
draw [line] (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD.north -| HOT->COLD);
draw (COLD.north -| COLD->HOT) -- (COLD->HOT);
draw [line] (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT.south -| COLD->HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
It is very simple, if you use the coordinate (nodea -| nodeb)
you have the y coordinate of nodea and the x coordinate of nodeb.
Off-topic: see also Should tikzset or tikzstyle be used to define TikZ styles?.
documentclass[tikz]{standalone}
usepackage{mathtools}
usetikzlibrary{shapes,arrows.meta}
% Define block styles
tikzset{
HOTRES/.style={
rectangle, draw, fill=red!20,
text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
COLDRES/.style ={
rectangle, draw, fill=blue!20, text width=20em, text centered, rounded corners, minimum height=1.5em
},
line/.style = {draw, -Latex},
cloud/.style = {
draw, ellipse,fill=yellow!20, node distance=3cm,
minimum height=4em
}
}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
% Reservoirs
node [HOTRES] (HOT) at (0,2) {Kuuma};
node [COLDRES] (COLD) at (0,-2) {Kylmä};
% Heat transfer
node [cloud] (HOT->COLD) at (-2,0) {(Q)};
node [cloud] (COLD->HOT) at (2,0) {(Q)};
% Lines
draw (HOT.south -| HOT->COLD) -- (HOT->COLD.north);
draw [line] (HOT->COLD) -- (COLD.north -| HOT->COLD);
draw (COLD.north -| COLD->HOT) -- (COLD->HOT);
draw [line] (COLD->HOT) -- (HOT.south -| COLD->HOT);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
answered 1 hour ago
CarLaTeX
29.6k447125
29.6k447125
add a comment |
add a comment |
documentclass[border = 5pt]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
usetikzlibrary{shadows.blur}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[
reserv/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = white,
rounded corners = 5pt,
minimum width = 6cm,
minimum height = 1cm, inner sep = 1pt,
drop shadow
},
proc/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = black,
circle,
minimum size = 1.5cm,
drop shadow, inner sep = 1pt,
},
arrow/.style = {
line width = 1mm, draw = gray!30, >=latex
}
]
node[reserv=red] (HOT) at (0, 0){$T_textrm{HOT}$};
node[proc=yellow] (M) at (-2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_M$};
node[proc=yellow] (L) at ( 2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_L$};
node[reserv=blue] (COLD) at (0, -6){$T_textrm{COLD}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (HOT.south -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (HOT.south -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$displaystyle{frac{eta_M}{eta_L}}Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (COLD.north -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$(1 - eta_M)Q$};
draw[arrow, ->] (COLD.north -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$eta_M Qdisplaystyle{left(frac{1}{eta_L} - 1right)}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (M) -- (L) node[below, midway]{$eta_M Q$};
node[left = 0.1cm of M, black, align = center] {More\efficient};
node[right = 0.1cm of L, black, align = center] {Less\efficient};
node[above = 1cm] at ($(M)!0.5!(L)$){$eta_M geq eta_L$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
add a comment |
documentclass[border = 5pt]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
usetikzlibrary{shadows.blur}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[
reserv/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = white,
rounded corners = 5pt,
minimum width = 6cm,
minimum height = 1cm, inner sep = 1pt,
drop shadow
},
proc/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = black,
circle,
minimum size = 1.5cm,
drop shadow, inner sep = 1pt,
},
arrow/.style = {
line width = 1mm, draw = gray!30, >=latex
}
]
node[reserv=red] (HOT) at (0, 0){$T_textrm{HOT}$};
node[proc=yellow] (M) at (-2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_M$};
node[proc=yellow] (L) at ( 2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_L$};
node[reserv=blue] (COLD) at (0, -6){$T_textrm{COLD}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (HOT.south -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (HOT.south -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$displaystyle{frac{eta_M}{eta_L}}Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (COLD.north -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$(1 - eta_M)Q$};
draw[arrow, ->] (COLD.north -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$eta_M Qdisplaystyle{left(frac{1}{eta_L} - 1right)}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (M) -- (L) node[below, midway]{$eta_M Q$};
node[left = 0.1cm of M, black, align = center] {More\efficient};
node[right = 0.1cm of L, black, align = center] {Less\efficient};
node[above = 1cm] at ($(M)!0.5!(L)$){$eta_M geq eta_L$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
add a comment |
documentclass[border = 5pt]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
usetikzlibrary{shadows.blur}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[
reserv/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = white,
rounded corners = 5pt,
minimum width = 6cm,
minimum height = 1cm, inner sep = 1pt,
drop shadow
},
proc/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = black,
circle,
minimum size = 1.5cm,
drop shadow, inner sep = 1pt,
},
arrow/.style = {
line width = 1mm, draw = gray!30, >=latex
}
]
node[reserv=red] (HOT) at (0, 0){$T_textrm{HOT}$};
node[proc=yellow] (M) at (-2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_M$};
node[proc=yellow] (L) at ( 2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_L$};
node[reserv=blue] (COLD) at (0, -6){$T_textrm{COLD}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (HOT.south -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (HOT.south -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$displaystyle{frac{eta_M}{eta_L}}Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (COLD.north -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$(1 - eta_M)Q$};
draw[arrow, ->] (COLD.north -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$eta_M Qdisplaystyle{left(frac{1}{eta_L} - 1right)}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (M) -- (L) node[below, midway]{$eta_M Q$};
node[left = 0.1cm of M, black, align = center] {More\efficient};
node[right = 0.1cm of L, black, align = center] {Less\efficient};
node[above = 1cm] at ($(M)!0.5!(L)$){$eta_M geq eta_L$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
documentclass[border = 5pt]{standalone}
usepackage{tikz}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
usetikzlibrary{positioning}
usetikzlibrary{shadows.blur}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}[
reserv/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = white,
rounded corners = 5pt,
minimum width = 6cm,
minimum height = 1cm, inner sep = 1pt,
drop shadow
},
proc/.style = {
draw = #1, fill = #1!50, text = black,
circle,
minimum size = 1.5cm,
drop shadow, inner sep = 1pt,
},
arrow/.style = {
line width = 1mm, draw = gray!30, >=latex
}
]
node[reserv=red] (HOT) at (0, 0){$T_textrm{HOT}$};
node[proc=yellow] (M) at (-2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_M$};
node[proc=yellow] (L) at ( 2, -3) {$textrm{eff.} = eta_L$};
node[reserv=blue] (COLD) at (0, -6){$T_textrm{COLD}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (HOT.south -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (HOT.south -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$displaystyle{frac{eta_M}{eta_L}}Q$};
draw[arrow, <-] (COLD.north -| M) -- (M) node[left, midway, black]{$(1 - eta_M)Q$};
draw[arrow, ->] (COLD.north -| L) -- (L) node[right, midway, black]{$eta_M Qdisplaystyle{left(frac{1}{eta_L} - 1right)}$};
draw[arrow, ->] (M) -- (L) node[below, midway]{$eta_M Q$};
node[left = 0.1cm of M, black, align = center] {More\efficient};
node[right = 0.1cm of L, black, align = center] {Less\efficient};
node[above = 1cm] at ($(M)!0.5!(L)$){$eta_M geq eta_L$};
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
answered 51 mins ago
caverac
5,5031522
5,5031522
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
add a comment |
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
Very nice the shadows. Peraphs, for my opinion, the T of temperature is smaller than COLD. Same for HOT.
– Sebastiano
25 mins ago
add a comment |
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– TheSodesa
2 hours ago
The requested edits have been made.
– TheSodesa
1 hour ago