Mysterious Lotus Casebook: the Wedding Dress episode!
Alternate events to the Wedding Dress shenanigans in episode 12, hahaa!
Yes, the subtitle is a Futurama quote :P
seen from Türkiye
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Norway
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from South Africa

seen from Poland

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Mexico
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
Mysterious Lotus Casebook: the Wedding Dress episode!
Alternate events to the Wedding Dress shenanigans in episode 12, hahaa!
Yes, the subtitle is a Futurama quote :P
Gender Bend Meet You at the Blossom!
So I was picturing if there was a woman version of Meet You at the Blossom, then a spoiled and spirited heiress would fall in love with an "Elf Lord" in the woods, only to discover (in a rather, shall we say, "heated" moment :P ) he is actually a she. Yes, it's that scene from the riverbank :D
Yet another silly alternate ending to Mysterious Lotus Casebook cuz . . . I'm not over it, ha ha!
Enjoy!
Loved loved loved Mysterious Lotus Casebook, and that epilogue still haunts me. I feel very torn about it.
So here's a stupid fix-it that came to mind during one of my re-watches :P
Entry Number 6 of my The Waters and the Wild series.
A Feast of Starlight. Inspired by Brian Froud creatures, and based off of a blurry picture I took New Years eve in Mexico City, ha haa.
An alternate ending to episode 8 of the Thai series Peaceful Property on Sale!
Note! I drew this before I saw what actually happens in episode 8, it's how I coped with the cliffhanger at the end of episode 7, ha ha haa!
Tolkien was inspired to create the beautiful Luthien Tinuviel when he saw his wife, Edith, dancing in a glen. He took something real and of the everyday, and made it mythical and ethereal. Both, the everyday and the fantastical, beautiful in their own realities.
Because of adjusting to a job with ridiculously long hours and just draining energy overall, I've really fallen behind with my art. However, lately I've tried carving a space for it over the weekends so I'm finally finishing pieces I've neglected for far too long.
This one is a bit of a weird one, but bear with me. I set myself the challenge to imitate the black and white art style of Wendy Pini for her Elfquest series from the 70s, but using Chaneques instead of Elves. For those who don't know, Chaneques are fairy/goblin like creatures in Mexican mythology, who are said to have the faces of old men, bowed legs and their feet are on backwards. They are tricksters towards humans but preservers of the natural world, and they feed off of energy (or life force).
The original intention of this challenge to myself was to simplify! I always take too long with my environments, I wanted to imitate a "deceptively" simpler style so I'd go faster . . . the end result was me going "Sure, I can spend 45 minutes to an hour drawing leaves from a tree native to Tepoztlan in the foreground".
Soooo . . . I failed, ha haa.
But I loved getting to draw coatis and cacomixtles as fae familiars. Also, I based the setting on a picture from one of my hikes with my brother and nephie.