
| Fronzel #1424021 1 month ago |
I know a few reasons why people like giving Fluttershy big boobs, but I wonder why Applejack is a close second.
Also, having the eye floating on top of the hair like that is bullshit. You're not doing cheap-ass pre-digital animation, you're drawing a single picture. Get the spacial relationships right. |
| CogWeaver #1424071 1 month ago |
No Fronzel, the real bullshit is that you feel it's your place to judge this pic and lower it's general desirability. It's called spacial recognition, where you show things on top of others that would normally be hidden/behind other things. Without it, her eyebrows only visible by the tips would make her smile look more sinister, and the rest of her eye hidden would make us question whether that actually was her eye closed, or some random black stripe on her cheek.
Don't be so quick to judge other artists' "failures" when you don't fully understand the concepts behind them. |
| Draconequus #1424086 1 month ago |
Those are some thick eyelashes. |
| Fronzel #1424253 1 month ago |
@071
The eyebrows aren't really a problem since they are full-on floating cartoon eyebrows with no realistic quality, but the eyes are different; the right eye seems to be part of her face as normal but a part of the left eye is in front of something that would normally be behind it. If showing most or all of the eyes is important, why isn't the whole design of the face more conducive to this? Or they could just be a bit less exaggerated so there's more room for other things on the face. Or the hair could be drawn to look less solid so there's a curtain effect where you can still see the eye through the space in-between the hairs. Or the that lock of hair could just be shifted a little to the left so it's not intruding on the eye. It just seems like a short-cut to just have parts of the face floating in front of other parts inconsistently. Sometimes you see very stylized eyes are are outright floating in front of character's head but that's not what's going on here. It only happens in a single part of the drawing because that part seems to be crowded. |