‘Ere you go! ref sheet for Art!Frisk.
No, that thingy draping behind is not some random tail. I thought it’d be cool to have a hood but make the hood extend to become a scarf that you culd either leave dangling or put around your neck as a scarf. So, voila!
Also some random info about Arttale:
Frisk is a digital artist. She can do sketches, digital paintings, random animations, etc.
Chara is a traditional artist. They’re a jack-of-all trades (but master of none), of a sort, knowing how to use most of the traditional mediums out there: pencil, pen, paint (acrylic, oil, watercolor), marker, etc.
The humans that fell to the underground were all some form of traditional artist that knew how to work with a single medium.
The underground is full of artists. Just… not artists that specifically draw. They are masters of other arts, like music, martial arts, dance, even baking/cooking.
The lore is that on the surface, monsters and humans used to live in peace and harmony, creating alongside each other and collaborating. However, the monsters, whose souls were made of creativity and love were more capable of creating than most humans. Most accepted it until they started to feel threatened. Threatened by the monsters’ capabilities to turn anything into an art. In their world, art was everything. It was also a means of competition. Since monsters started to dominate, they started to retaliate. War broke out between the humans and the monsters. The humans knew nothing but how to follow orders and fight. The monsters, however, put creativity into fighting, and infused their magic into combat. However, they were far outnumbered and pushed into a mountain and finally sealed.
Chara was a human that tried to experiment with art. They were not limited to only the visual arts, and had enough creativity to see the possibilities in other things. However, the tunnel-visioned people of the surface ostracized them. Chara wanted to commit suicide by going to the mountain and dropping in the hole, but by a stroke of luck, survived the fall. They became enamored with the thinking of the monsters and their kind, tolerant natures. They thought they could show the humans more, and expand their minds by opening the barrier and freeing the monsters.