does anyone have that image of the gen 1 cast in okay quality. like this but not total ass. thanks in advance i need to make a post about it
158 notes
·
View notes
Tell me they aren't all the same person. I dare you. (It's just each time they're more and more mentally fucked. You choose the order.)
74 notes
·
View notes
alenoah is very good for many reasons but one of my favourites is the fact that alejandro is (supposedly) this super attractive super suave very charming guy who turns eyes and makes people question their sexualities and all of that jazz, and noah's the world's tiredest office worker shoved into the body of an anaemic stick bug.
and you know alejandro would brag about his beloved partner to whoever would listen. he has albums on his phone of candid photos of noah and they're all just the ugliest, unflattering things- the majority of them are of him sleeping some where he absolutely shouldn't be and getting drool all over himself or something.
meanwhile noah has one (1) photo of alejandro on his phone and it's the only picture of alejandro in existence where he doesn't look immaculate and alejandro hates it.
86 notes
·
View notes
(chester voice) back in my day men used to be able to dress openly cuntily!!
redraw of this lol
78 notes
·
View notes
this was the trello sketch i had saved, enjoy more harold
137 notes
·
View notes
practicing a new style and decided to revive an old series. these three i already had designs for, i just tweaked the designs a bit. i don’t think i ever posted noah’s but his didn’t change much.
(just in case you don’t know, from left to right are gwen, owen, and noah from the Total Drama series.)
next i’ll be drawing duncan and heather for sure, but i need a third. who else should i draw?
73 notes
·
View notes
So I got 1 more slot for one more harold au design but I out of idea right now. I didn't change the top right one design, no harold is a waterbender what are you talking about? bloodbender? hell naw he only know basic healing and some cool waterbending moves...
72 notes
·
View notes
Hey, so a few years back you stated that to start drawing you replicated the styles of works you liked. How did you go about replicating the styles. I’m currently trying to create ocs that fit into a style similar to Clone High and Total Drama, whilst not being a carbon copy of existing characters.
Also, would it be easier to use 2d or 3d shapes.
You're quite lucky because Total Drama is an incredibly varied style, so there's a lot more flexibility to making OCs in the style without being carbon copies! To study styles, I tend to draw from reference, collecting how they draw head shapes/hands/different facial features/bodies, etc. in different sections to see what variety exists. Here, I've done bodies, heads, and faces, but I recommend creating sketch piles of whatever style elements you can think of.
(Total Drama/Clone High is one of the flattest styles possible. It's incredibly 2D and geometric, focusing on shapes rather than anatomy.)
You can really see this if you try to break down the characters into their basic shapes. Everything can be broken down into a single shape that are overlapped to form the body. By tracing over the existing characters, I can figure out what shapes they use for each character.
The head shapes are nearly always flat on top, with any sort of curve to represent the face shape, and a flat triangle-ish shape for the neck. Depending on how definied the jaw is, there can be a line spearating the head and neck, or not. The ears are always a quarter-circle shape.
The faces are then quite high up on the face and condensed. The eyes and nose don't usually overlap but they're very close together. The mouth is never directly below the nose, placed closer to one eye than the other.
Then, to put this into practice, I try to turn three of my OCs into the TD style. Trying to caricaturise existing characters helps you connect how certain features look in the new style.
I start with the basic shapes, then add the hair/clothes details.
So yeah, just a bunch of tracing/drawing from reference, and then trying to put it in practice, going back to references when you're uncertain.
86 notes
·
View notes