Exaggerating the body refers the body being exaggerated than in real life and due to the use of line art, a non-fat character’s torso and limbs being thick or thin line by line by drawing big and small distances in the lines side by side that depends on the artist’s and making a non-fat character’s torso and short by making big and small distances in the lines end by end depending on the style, there’s no exact standard and artists have their style drawing big and small distances of the lines side by side and end by end, what other ways do artists make techniques of the line art that differs in their style?
Could you link to some examples?
Is this a homework assignment?
That is some sentence.
Please translate into English.
Popeye has big arms! And tattoos.
Oooh, he looks buff, til you see them knock knees.
Oh yeah, he is. his arms almost look like tumors.
James Joyce called and wants his sentence back.
mmm
As an art teacher, I keep thinking I should be able to parse your sentences.
Could you rephrase your post, and include examples?
I keep wondering if they are describing anime art.
I do some line drawing . I just have drawn what I see.
I determine thickness or thinness or other descriptors by what I see.
Comic and anime artists may do it differently since it comes from their imagination.
They obviously have a different language about it.
Illustrator Jack Davis of Mad Magazine comes to mind.
I can’t edit my post though, but I’ll similar topic about that soon.
How about just redoing it here in this thread.
Just tell us what you meant!
(I feel like an angry date about to storm out of a blind date in a skeevy Italian restaurant).
Then you won’t want to explore her(?) other threads:
I’ve made an honest attempt to parse, understand and respond to these posts, but even as an artist, I can’t. I’ve actually entertained the idea that these are AI.
I’ve often seen that technique applied to a Westend Wander horse, with a recursive bridle secured to the outland filagrees. It’s nice.
I’ve thought that too, but AI text is usually much more comprehensible. It also doesn’t really sound like something produced by someone whose first language isn’t English. It’s puzzling.
That sentence doesn’t give me hope.
He’ll have to get past Gertrude Stein first.
One of the writers I worked with had a Ph.D in English Lit, and, when I gave him some comic books that were less-than-chronological, with un-diagrammable dialogue (Quantum & Woody), he yelled “And my students claim they can’t follow Joyce!”
But that “Why is it dark with eyes closed” stuff is Joyce with a comic book AND a bong…