Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

Developing an artstyle is HARD.

Hey guys, sorry to keep you hanging. Alot's been going on, my niece and nephew are sick, so is my big brother and mom. My sister and I were more fortunate @__@. Recently I've been hard at work tuning my art-style. At first I was drawing my characters too androgynous. My girls were not feminine enough and my guys were not masculine enough (with guys it's typical to make them androgynous...). Then, when I tried to feminize my girl character I realized her eyes were half the size of her face, and her irises were WAY too small. (she always looked surprised).
Now I'm trying to develop the lips more, make smaller noses, for the eyes, make the irises bigger and the eyes smaller. For the guys, lessen the lashes, make the face more angular, more distict noses. It's harder then it looks! But I guess this is what separates my style from generic manga. I want the guys manly but not "Fist of the north star" manly. And I want my girls more girly but not "Sailor moon" girly. I'm trying not to make one gender more extreme than the other, otherwise the whole artstyle will look unbalanced. The bigger picture is that I don't want my art to look like someone else's.
I would be so embarrissed >__>. Cause as I said about style in my previous blog, I don't like it when one manga looks too similar in style to another's. On deviant art (I haven't been on in like. Ever.) it was very common, not among art-thieves, but among beginning artist trying to get out there. I've been drawing for years and to this day I'm still trying to find the right style, something that screams "ME". Something that some one will get smacked if they mistake it for someone else's. To be honest, I've seen very distinct styles more often in OEL manga. Like Fred Gallagher's "Megatokyo", or Mark Crilley's "Miki Falls". I find that OEL (original english language) manga has more challenges to go through than Japanese manga. Japanese manga can either make it in japan or the western hemisphere (U.S., U.K., Europe...). For OEL manga it's make it or break it. It's trying to bring out it's own style and origin but while trying to stay in the manga genre. The Manga genre is a very limited art style, and to dare break out of it would bring you into the independent graphic novel genre, making it less likely for popularity. So to make a "Popular manga" means you have to limit yourself, but I can't do that. I need to push myself further, Which means that I need to work on my anatomy, scenery, and still life. That's right. I got to go back to basics. But by doing so I believe that I will achieve a supreme art style, even If I hate myself in the process of it, that happens to every artist, usually I put my head against the tablet and say "I hate this!" "I'm not good enough!" "AUGH! DX". On a positive note I have good manga to share with you.


MANGA REVIEW: Gold Digger

Story and Art by: Fred Perry


Don't let the title throw you off. It's a peculiar name but it's not what you think it is. This manga is a personal favorite of mine. It's about two women, Gina Diggers or "Gold Digger" who's a world famous archaeologist/scientist and her adopted sister Brittany or "Cheetah" who's a were-cheetah with great speed, strength and serves as Gina's bodyguard. Together this unlikely pair explores the world finding lost cities and solving great mysteries, if they aren't getting into trouble... It's an action-packed adventure series with comedy and neat old school references. I like it because it's marked as part of the manga genre, but it actually breaks through into it's own personal style. It also passes the expectations of OEL manga without becoming too independent. It's an old manga (1990's) and it's still ongoing so that's assurance that it's good. The artist uses a style of simplified facial features, exaggerated expressions, muscular men and trademark babes from the manga genre. But the detailing, scenery, inking, storyline and action scenes have a distinct western style. What I like about it so much is it's unique style. Just by looking at it I can tell the artist. Fred Perry, also known for doing an OVA of the series, check it out, the guy does his own animation! That who I want to be like. I want to be known for my style and storytelling, including my animation skills (I didn't tell you I did flash animation, did I? The more you know ^__^). I think this book is a great example of what OEL manga can accomplish and how it can differ from the manga genre without cutting away from it.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Let me enlighten you

There are many things I can't live without in life. Family, Friendship, Food, Video games, the Internet and many others. But there was ONE thing in life I found and with it realized my true life's calling, Manga.

FREEZE! Before you think this blog is stereotypical what-so-ever. I am not a super saiyan japanophile weeaboo who only feeds off super popular comics like Naruto, Bleach, D. Gray-Man, Code Geass (more like Gay-ass) and other fanfiction spawners. I'm a girl who knows 3-years of japanese, wants to be the first female super saiyan and feeds of not-so-ordinary comics. Most importantly I see manga not as an article of reading leisure, but an art form and most importantly, my purpose in life.

I don't want drawing manga to be a hobby to keep while working at a crappy job. It's not going to be a guilty pleasure because there's nothing guilty about it. I want to be a manga artist. I want to draw comics for a living. It's rare to have a job that makes you more than happy to do it everyday. When I think of manga I think "If you love it so much, why not do it for a living?". I have many friends who are skilled at this art form, but downsize their skills as a "hobby". Often as a "When I have a stable job and get enough money then I'll pursue my dream" kind of thing. I refuse! I want--no--I WILL make my dream a reality. I love to create manga, and never in my life, have I had such determination to accomplish this dream. That is why drawing manga is not my hobby, but my life. I am a family person, though, so don't think I'm cooped up in a lonesome room using manga as my only company. That's another thing. I have a big family and I love them to death. So you can scratch off the "The socially inept manga artist" stereotype.

Basically I'll be blogging about Manga styles, techniques, family life and as an added bonus~
I'll be reviewing manga! And NO, It won't be ordinary super popular manga. I've grown a taste for a wide variety of manga, some classics, some new, each of them a different genre. It's nice to check out manga you might have never read before, no?
So let me be your akward-independent guide into the world of manga. Let me enlighten you without brainwashing you. So sit back and enjoy the ride.