ratcreature: Say no to creatures (& women) in refrigerators. (refrigerator)
RatCreature ([personal profile] ratcreature) wrote2006-09-24 06:51 pm

how to draw female comic characters (according to Wizard)...

[livejournal.com profile] brown_betty asked for examples "to illustrate the exactly how and why female comic characters are illustrated differently than the male." And I thought, really, what's better to illustrate these things than the books teaching the style in the first place?

A while ago I posted some scans from Wizard How To Draw series on drawing female superheroes (here and here), and I thought I'd post a bunch more from the first book of the series on "How To Draw: Heroic Anatomy".


As everything, it starts with the basics, i.e. proportions. First the male superhero


The female example is similar, but slightly different, notice how he stands firm and straight, wheras she stands with her hips cocked a little and the leg thrust forward?


Also notice in the direct torso comparison below, how the male one is ramrod straight, but she curves and leans just a little bit in the same pose?


Now onwards to the chapter "Sultry Women". It even cautions you against overposing! Yes, it's not as if Wizard wasn't aware of the problems! (Their definition and mine of which poses are already overposed might differ slightly though, heh.)





Next, Michael Turner explains "Sex Appeal". (Or what he thinks sex appeal is.) Incidentally it also illustrates the meaning of "overposed" that was brought up in the previous chapter very effectively...





Finally for compare and contrast purpuses the chapters on "Superheroic Men" and "Superheroic Women". For the male superhero it is all about more or less ridiculously enlarged muscles as we learn:





Female superheroes don't have it that easy, they need to worry about tilting their shoulder, nipple and pubic lines attractively at all times, not to mention legs, breast size, eye make-up and hair:




[identity profile] xoverau.livejournal.com 2006-09-26 05:48 pm (UTC)(link)
As another bisexual, I agree that some of them were sexy.

I'm not sure that it's even the pictures themselves that bug me, so much as the commentary accompanying them. Males in comics pose unrealistically, buns clenched, fists thrust high and chests flexed to exhibit appealing pecs, their manhoods painstakingly shaded and outlined. If these guys acknowledged that they were drawing men that way not just to show their power but to make women and gay men want to nail them, I'd be able to say, "This is just an immature, adolescent-aimed medium." But that, via the commentary, men have the chief purpose of getting super things done and women have the chief purpose of attracting men? EW ICK EW.

This is how I assuage my own disappointment in my libido.