| _ticketyboo ( @ 2005-03-22 00:34:00 |
| Current mood: | busy |
Doodlage!

Here's a girl I drew randomly in class today. I don't know who she is. She's a bit Ramona Quimby and a bit Amelie and a bit Raven from Demonology 101, but who knows?
Ophelia. And Hamlet. They're sexy and crazy and she's got thunderthighs. *so much love*
And as far as random ships with no basis in reality go, we have Jimmy Olsen and Supergirl. Because cuteness. *beams*
Ramiro. Nekkid and anatomically confusing (hey, I was drawing in the dark during film class!), for Caroline mostly. Eventually I'll do a real version of this and he'll be all beat up and sad and needing comfort. Hee.
Drew these on the train back from Boston a few weeks ago. I'm trying to make the girls' features look different, hence Aelora's full upper lip and Ivory's wide mouth and so on. Problem is Ivory has this wide mouth with relatively thin lips and I can't figure out a way to draw that on her kewpie face without making her look like a monkey. She also appears to have developed dimples. Oh, that cutesy little coke addict.
Drew this on the plane back from Florida; it's part of a stylized series of the Angels girls Jane Austen style (heavily influenced by this). These aren't so good, but hey, what do you expect on a moving plane?
And all three girls, drawn about a week ago in Classics class. They're cute. And drink a lot of tea.
And the triumph of the Austen sketches. I really adore the coloring on this. It was a lot of fun. Now I just need to figure out how to do the boys in this style and we're cooking with GAS.
This is how I passed those four hours waiting for my plane. I have no idea who she is, but she fascinates me. Clearly it's a complex murder mystery. The girl in the portrait is her ancestor, and that gem is a family heirloom. Those strange and exotic flowers are poisonous and their poison has been mixed into the snuff in that snuffbox. The poison is also part of the family's legacy, which explains the motif of the flowers in the decor of their ancestral home (as seen on the lamp). The myth of Diana and Actaeon, (poorly) depicted on the vase, is somehow related to this mystery. And I don't know why she's in drag, but I'm sure there's a thrilling reason for it. I'd really like to know the story behind all this; it sounds like it would make a great novel.