Well, at least some of the time. I still draw chibis the same way. But I have to learn how to draw people really well for my book to work. T___T; This is good practice. 

I tried to make him look more half British/Japanese with a nice, strong jaw, larger, more defined nose, bit of a different cheekbone structure, different eye shape, that sort of thing. 😀

I also decided to change how I draw Hakuba (and the rest of the cast) the other day… in preparation for learning how to draw humans in a more illustratory style vs cartoony. 

cloverkite made me a 100 pg super nice thick presentation paper sketchbook for my birthday, and used the thing I made as the cover and I’m so thrilled omg it’s beautiful <3 THANK YOU CLOVER

Also sorry you got cut in half, Conan :D;;; 

I’ve heard of lookie lookie don’t touch the cookie, but this is ridiculous.

bojack

The long weekend was very good for me. I feel a lot better.

EXCEPT THAT MY LEGS ARE ITCHING LIKE CRAZY AAAHHHH

moobiess:

Hi! First, I want to say thank you for the kind comment and I’m glad you’re interested in the medium I’m using!! ^^ I get this question a lot on my twitter so I guess I’ll answer and compile it on this post. It’s a very long post so I’ll put it under this cut, but get ready!

Keep reading

animal-factbook:

Happy national dog day!
Did you know that dogs from different countries speak different dog languages? German scientist Sigmund Freud came up with this theory after seeing his Japanese Shiba Inu and German Shepard attempting to bark at each other with no apparent understanding of each other’s barks. This theory was later proven in 2003 by the American behavior psychologist John Watson using modern technology to analyze the dog’s linguistic skills, coming to find that dogs from different geographic locations do not share the same bark sounds.