
Found this while shipping some artwork out. Two inks I did sometime last year. Small, nothing special, but I thought I'd share. I see some major, major flaws in them, but I intend to approach both characters more often.
My yet unnamed dragon-hating Manticore gal, and a Gnoll I played DnD with a few times (just a few close friends, not serious, and not sober, haha). One plays coy but would just as soon beat you down.. the other is quelled only by drink.. lots.. and lots.. of drink.
They're each black and white ink on 6"x8" paper and are for sale for $11.50 each (shipping included) if anyone is interested.
My yet unnamed dragon-hating Manticore gal, and a Gnoll I played DnD with a few times (just a few close friends, not serious, and not sober, haha). One plays coy but would just as soon beat you down.. the other is quelled only by drink.. lots.. and lots.. of drink.
They're each black and white ink on 6"x8" paper and are for sale for $11.50 each (shipping included) if anyone is interested.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / General Furry Art
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 792 x 594px
File Size 230.5 kB
Haha, gnolls are great fun. I never really thought much of them, but practically all the characters my boyfriend plays are gnolls (his next plan is a gnoll warlock. GOOD LUCK WITH THAT) so they've sort of grown on me.
I love girly girls, but I also really love 'burly' girls like this. I feel that it's a drawing aesthetic that isn't used as often as it should be, which is odd because anthro art lends itself to this dichotomy (being feminine but still looking like they can tear your face off) much more than most other styles of art.
ANYWAY I'M RAMBLING LOL. c: A question: I know you said these were inked, but what did you use? Fountain pen, ballpen, or microns? Flaws aside, I really like how you've done the shift in line weights on these, especially on the gnoll.
I love girly girls, but I also really love 'burly' girls like this. I feel that it's a drawing aesthetic that isn't used as often as it should be, which is odd because anthro art lends itself to this dichotomy (being feminine but still looking like they can tear your face off) much more than most other styles of art.
ANYWAY I'M RAMBLING LOL. c: A question: I know you said these were inked, but what did you use? Fountain pen, ballpen, or microns? Flaws aside, I really like how you've done the shift in line weights on these, especially on the gnoll.
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