Tags: jewelry | diy | art tutorial | art | fashion | mythology | reference | face model | model | animal | body type | skin tone | tattoo | makeup | fantasy | posing | hair | armor | setting | lighting | writing | scifi | historical | palette | male | anatomy | weapon | couple | music |
Different Male Bodies.
wow ironically i was talking about this today or something? yesterday i think. maybe.
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm delicious
also good ref
Variety is the best guys.
(via nogamiryoutarou)
omg the first time I saw this I never realized the person also added fluorite omg
I love you shihou
(via nogamiryoutarou)
Their website doesn’t let me see any of these things. -_- Just corsets and stuff.
(via frillypinkdreams)
Adding character diversity: Body type
Tips on how to draw not so cookie cutter characters! Change body type and shape, showing off natural differences in build that happen in real life! Not everyone is built the same!
Pt 2 and 3 will follow but check it out on the original posting on the artist’s deviant!is that crash beside medic hahaha
crash used to be best character with spyro…
(via referencesforartists)
Cycling became an enormously popular pastime for men and women after about 1895, able to combine an energetic sporting activity with a practical means of transport. Women could accompany men and a general feeling of freedom added to the craze. Special cycling trousers or “bloomers” were worn by some female cyclists as a much more practical garment than a full-length skirt which might catch in the bicycle gears or chain. This particular outfit comprises a jacket, waistcoat and bloomers, with a brown felt hat printed with a “time to light-up table” inside, for night-time cycling.
Although such outfits for women were practical, they were also socially risque, encouraging women to wear a form of trousers, and contemporary magazines, particularly Punch, loved to ridicule cycling women for their brash and masculine appearance. Largely because of this social disapproval, many women cyclists in England preferred to struggle with their thick ankle-length skirts well into the 20th century.I actually need this on my body
Now I want a lady version of Lord Flasheart wearing these and popping wheelies as she shouts rude things at schoolboys.
Somebody with the demeanor of Lord Flasheart might indeed make a fine woman, but I assure you that she would never be a lady.
(via technotropism)