Some
leamur fanart. Playing around with his Vixens at a Border Checkpoint. The Lupine officer apparently has said something pointed at the Vixen Border Guard. Trying to keep the vixen uniforms mostly cannon except the brassard, and the probably brightly colored Helmet cover. The Lupines, I portrayed as having retained a few older traditions for their border guards, with the "Ike" style jackets, leather gear, and an older traditional helmet style (Metal, therefore easily polished). This would not reflect the appearance of field troops which would be more up to date, and therefore a lot more drab. Female officer of Artillery. How else to flaunt your country's wealth and status than by polishing up your border guards? done in Manga Studio 4 EX (including the base sketches for a change.. entirely digital this time).
Category Artwork (Digital) / Comics
Species Wolf
Size 992 x 929px
File Size 317.9 kB
Listed in Folders
Before the Internet, there was Yarf Magazine, and Chris Grant's "Empires" was published there in. Lo these many years ago all my friends and I ended up inking pages of Empires to meet deadlines. It's influence spreqd so far that "Tank Vixens" was a parody of it, written by our own
Patpahootie. but now it's sort of vanished from public consciousness like the rest of the pre-internet Fandom. Christ Grant is still around but he's long out of the fandom, though.
Patpahootie. but now it's sort of vanished from public consciousness like the rest of the pre-internet Fandom. Christ Grant is still around but he's long out of the fandom, though.
I have conceptual problems with hair on Anthros (just look at my work). It occurs, and I can do it, just a little iffy. The Female lupine has it, but other than a cowlick, it's all in a severe pony tail. The male probably has it buzzed short. The vixens have it as well.
Generally I approach my amthro work by putting an animal skull with mods on top of a human skeletal system (mostly more or less depending on the background, and presentation), rather than putting a animal Muzzle on a human skull and skeleton so things like eye placement, foreheads and cranial volume vary, and as such Human hair style often do not work well. Just depends.
Generally I approach my amthro work by putting an animal skull with mods on top of a human skeletal system (mostly more or less depending on the background, and presentation), rather than putting a animal Muzzle on a human skull and skeleton so things like eye placement, foreheads and cranial volume vary, and as such Human hair style often do not work well. Just depends.
For a real world rediculous border crossing. Here is a video of the daily border closing ceremony between india and pakistan. Whooo-boy. They take competitive stomping and prancing to new heights.
http://youtu.be/n9y2qtaopbE
http://youtu.be/n9y2qtaopbE
It's pretty much all I ink and color in these days. I started with EX4 as well, but 5 is a whole new level of awesome. If you're not doing comics with tons of pages that require organization, Manga Studio 5 has all the features that Manga Studio EX5 has... But it's only 80 dollars, and in some cases with sales, far less. Just thought I'd mention that!
The smooth watercolor brush is particularly blendy and easy to work with. I recommend trying out the demo of 5/EX5, but I seriously recommend reconsidering EX since you don't do large comic projects. Literally the only difference is the story management. (They even use the same executable/installer, an ex license just unlocks that set of features.)
'Tis all good. The in fashion method of holding long arms it the "low-ready" as it minimizes this problem while still being fast to use. The method of shoulder "sling-arms" the agitated vixen is using is still taught in basic for drill and ceremony, something which has to be beat out of every new guy coming to a veteran unit. Seeing barrels up usually invokes images of hunters and WWII in soldier's minds, it is generally out of fashion in that regard.
Well doing the Modern "Low Ready" wouldn't fit with the sort of 1970's, or Warsaw Pact vibe I was going for for the vixens. I know the WW2 D&C very well as I have done rifle Detail with an M-1 Garand for several ceremonies and a couple of funerals, and it's very different from now, In fact the D&C has changed some since the early 1980's when I was in ROTC. That Low Ready look is really the iconic pose of the current GWOT.
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