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...full front shot at least once in your comic.

I have made a discovery - attempting to draw other peoples characters for pin-ups or for contests, or just for fun:

Artists, for some reason, don't draw their entire character - or obscure them with things blocking their legs, lower half, mid-section, or arm or position them at odd angles...

This makes the character extremely difficult to draw.

So, PLEASE!...at least in one panel somewhere - anywhere in your comic, (the earlier in the book the better) draw your character head to toe, as unobstructed as possible, and in a fairly bland pose*. If you can slip in a front shot and a back shot even better.

*Don't kill the acting to do this, but just see if it can be squeaked in.

This does a few things:

1. As a reader, it allows me to appreciate what the character fully looks like. All the details of their outfit, their hair, their look. It also firmly establishes or cements the character in my mind, so I can either accept or reject how they are portrayed through the rest of the story.

2. As an artist, it allows me to know what the character actually looks like! There's nothing worse than getting half shots, mid-shots, obstructed shots, feet only and all things things are scattered across pages - but no shot of the whole - this makes it very difficult to figure out what the character actually looks like. Is the belt here or here? How tall are they? Um...does that sleeve work like this or this?

There of course can be some educated guesses, but sometimes things to need to be more or less exact.

I think it would also be appreciated by the general audience too, because then they are assured, that their favorite character is a whole thing.

So help a brother out - and I'll keep this in mind for my own creations too.

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