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preventerWIND
Super Robot
Posts: 6423
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« Reply #161 on: 4 May 2008, 03:38:48 » |
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>_> So yeah, I've been working on a new Samus Aran design.. THE POWER SUIT! >: C This sketch looks a lot better than what I'm drawing right now, that always happens to me.. So yeah, I'm aiming for a sleeker design to that of the bulky suit. I've gone for a biker helmet look and.. BOOBS. Posted on: 1 May 2008, 04:56:24
A brief explanation: I DONT #####ING KNOW BUT ITS AWESOME
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preventerWIND
Super Robot
Posts: 6423
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« Reply #165 on: 4 May 2008, 16:51:28 » |
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #191 on: 19 June 2008, 21:34:30 » |
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Wind, I've got some actual good advice aside from watching cartoons. I started out drawing anime-style-ish. I was young, though, and Pokemon and DBZ were both hip, so it was acceptable.
But still.
I eventually made a conscious effort to switch out of that artistic pit and range myself.
The biggest step for me? Drawing noses.
A lot of my cartoons still don't have noses. In fact, Alan Simple, my own little green spaceman, doesn't have a nose. But other characters in his same little world do, and as cheesy as it sounds, starting to draw the nose is a big mental step in a transition from an anime-style to a more Western-style.
Noses are more than tiny deformed triangle freckles, you know.
And yeah, I'm not saying you don't draw noses, I mean, that JC clearly has one. But you get the picture.
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ASR
Super Robot
Posts: 10911
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« Reply #193 on: 19 June 2008, 23:54:05 » |
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It's easier to make that transition than you'd think.
It's kind of weird. I used to love anime/manga style artwork and such, but all of a sudden I grew out of it and I started to really prefer a more Western style of cartooning.
I never really did anything realistic, and more recently I have been dabbling in that category, too. Most recently with those sharpie drawings.
I've realized that it helps with cartooning, too. When you draw very realistically, I mean. Because you realize that after doing that for a while, and then going back to outlandish cartoons, your cartoons look more grounded and realistic without looking any less outlandish.
It helps your talent grow, I suppose. Working backwards, in a way.
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