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Today’s official prompt word for Inktober is “flowing.” I’ll admit that I struggled a bit with that prompt until I remembered the Scottish princess Merida and her long, flowing, curly red hair from the Disney/Pixar movie Brave. So I drew her.

I have a Merida doll that I purchased from the Disney Store a few years ago so I decided to use it as a model. I had laid the doll down flat on her back while I was gathering my pencil, eraser, and sketchbook and I noticed that the way that her hair was spread out looked pretty cool. So I shot a picture of the doll with my smartphone and I did my drawing based on that photograph.

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Previous Entries in This Series

Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
Part 5
Part 6
Part 7

Another week has gone by with no new tutorial videos from Ady Almanza. Since I had contacted her the week before and she responded quickly, I decided to just leave her alone and continue with winging it. I still had a few extra pages left (due mainly to the fact that the children’s board book I selected has more pages than the board book that Ady Almanza uses in her tutorials).

Last time I decided to do something with the two dolls that I have that are based on Anna and Elsa from the Disney movie Frozen and I became so obsessed with doing it (and doing it correctly so anyone viewing it would recognize who the two women are) that I ended up spending more time working on it than I intended. I also spent time working on the piece when there are other things on my life that I should’ve been working on but I ended up putting them on the back burner instead. I was also reminded that there was a reason why I rarely do fan art.

So what did I do this time? More fan art based on another Disney character. (LOL!) You may think that I’m a masochist but I learned a few things from the previous project so I decided on a different approach.

I have a doll based on Merida from the Disney/Pixar movie Brave. I bought her at the Disney Store just a few weeks after I saw Brave at the local movie theater. Like the other two Frozen dolls, Merida is also 1/6 scale, which makes her around the same size as Barbie, Ever After High, Monster High, Bratz, and other fashion dolls. The one defining characteristic of Merida is her long curly red hair that’s very unruly and wild. This is even noticeable in the doll version.

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The details on this doll are impeccable. Notice the tiny freckles on her face and the Celtic design on the large silver button that closes her dark green cloak.

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She even looks lovely from behind.

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Here are the pages before I started working on them.

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And here are the pages after I finished.

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Like the previous Frozen art, I decided to use all acrylic paints with this piece. I also decided that I would just focus on an extreme closeup on her face while her unruly hair would literally cascade over two pages. That way, I could paint a simple background in one color. Merida’s hair was easy because, unlike the neat braids of Anna and Elsa (which were the most time-consuming part of the last project), I could literally cut loose with my brush and I did. I didn’t have to worry about neatness at all, which I found was very refreshing. I initially did an underpainting of dark red paint. As I added layers of lighter red paint, I would try to swirl it around with my brush in an effort of replicate her long curls. Ultimately I used a palette knife to render the curls because I found that the effect worked a lot better than just using a brush alone.

I used a smaller amount of glitter glue than on the previous pages. I mainly used it in a tiny corner where one can see a small triangle of Merida’s green dress with the gold trim. I thought about using glitter glue in her hair but I decided against it at the last minute because I found that using acrylic paint alone did a fine enough job of rendering the unruly curls in her hair. I also didn’t want to make the common artist mistake of not knowing when to stop creating something while continuing with adding more paint, more various types of media, and more special artist effects until the painting becomes something totally ugly, gaudy, and overdone. Personally I think it’s better to be understated in one’s art than to go totally overboard to the point of becoming an eye sore instead of eye candy.

I only have one more extra page left where I could wing it in order to fill all of the pages in the book by the time I finish with the last of the video tutorials. If Ady Almanza resumes her video tutorial series, I’ll do a final two-page spread then switch to just one page at a time for the rest of the tutorial series. If she doesn’t upload a video, I’ll just wing it with only one page. I won’t know until Saturday or Sunday (which is when she uploads her videos) at the earliest what I’ll do.

Subsequent Entries in This Series

Part 9
Part 10
Part 11
Part 12

I had gone to the Katsucon anime convention in the past but it must have been at least five years since I attended the last one. (I remembered I attended the last one when it was still held in downtown Washington, DC instead of its current home in National Harbor, Maryland.)

The past few weeks I slacked off on doing major decluttering of my home because I decided to try participating in my first anime convention-related Art Show. (I’ve been to previous anime conventions but I’ve never submitted anything to the Art Show.) I purchased a blank canvas bag and did this two-sided painting of the Gardener Twins Souseiseki and Suiseiseki from the anime Rozen Maiden. (You can read the February 14, 2013 blog entry for more details about the painting of this bag.)

Souseiseki/Suiseiseki Bag
Souseiseki/Suiseiseki Bag

Even though I preregistered over the Internet (I was able to get a weekend pass at a discount) and it entitled me to pick up my pass the day before the convention opened, I wasn’t able to make it on Thursday because the pick-up time conflicted with my weekly support group meeting for people who are separated or divorced. (Since the meeting fell on February 14—Valentine’s Day—the group was holding an "Anti-Valentine’s Day Party" instead of the usual meeting and I really wanted to go to it.) So I woke up early and got to National Harbor as soon as possible. Luckily there was a separate line for preregistrations and it was shorter than the line for those who were purchasing passes at the door so I didn’t have to spend too much time waiting in line.

Once I picked up my pass I immediately headed to the Art Show where I entered my tote bag. I had put it in a display case but I also posted photos showing both sides of the bag since the display case could only show one side at a time. Here is what it looked like after I hung it at the Art Show.

Katsucon 2013

By the time I got my pass and hung up my tote bag at the Art Show I was feeling hungry because it was around noon. In order to save as much time and money as possible, I opted to bring my own lunch, dinner, and sodas in a giant Wegman’s insulated bag from home. (The bag was pretty heavy to carry around at times until I consumed the food and drink.) So I sat in a chair in the Gaylord Hotel and Convention Center lobby and ate my lunch. I have to admit that the entire large complex was pretty fancy. Here is a shot of the Convention Center atrium.

Katsucon 2013

The only major snag that first day came when I realized that I didn’t have enough battery power in my cell phone so I couldn’t issue as many Twitter tweets as I wanted. I had a car charger but it would’ve meant going to the parking garage, finding my car, starting the engine, letting it run for up to a half-an-hour while my phone recharges, then go back to the Gaylord Hotel and Convention Center. I found a Best Buy Express vending machine and I found that there was a battery recharger on sale for my cell phone. I sucked it up and charged $40 to the credit card to get that item.

So while I was eating lunch I decided to recharge the cell phone with the new battery. It worked for a while then it stopped recharging. I read the manual and found that the battery needed to be recharged and it didn’t have much juice left. The battery didn’t come with any wall adapter and I really didn’t want to pay more money at the Best Buy Express vending machine to get one so I basically dealt with a cell phone with low battery power for the entire day. As a result I ended up making tweets about the day’s events the following morning. I kept on taking photos with my cell phone until I lost battery power entirely.

Once I finished eating lunch I shopped around in the Merchants’ Room. I did mostly window shopping because I’m currently in the process of decluttering my home and I’m trying to be conservative in spending my money due to my husband suing me for divorce. There were plenty of things on sale and if you weren’t careful, you could easily go broke buying all kinds of stuff that you really don’t need to survive but they looked irresistable.

Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013
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Katsucon 2013

This one statue on sale made me feel old. It’s Kimberly from the early 1980’s video game Space Ace. I remember when I used to play that game in the arcades. If the statue hadn’t been out of my personal price range, I would’ve been tempted to buy it because of both the video game and the fact that she shares the same name as me. (LOL!)

Katsucon 2013

The next three photos are from the most bizarre booth I saw in the Merchants’ Room. The military-style armbands promoted tolerance of same-sex relationships by using terms like Yaoi and appropriate symbols. But the hats reminded me of Nazi hats from World War II and there was even a giant swastika against a psychedelic background on display in the background. That booth had me scratching my head.

Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013

I read on the Den of Angels forum of a series of Asian ball jointed doll meetups that were going to happen during Katsucon. I was on the fence about being able to make any of those meetups so I decided to pack my smaller 1/6 and 1/12 scale dolls just in case because they are lighter and easier to carry than my larger dolls. (I’ve carried some of these larger dolls around at anime and doll conventions in the past and it turned out to be such a pain to lug them around.) I slipped these small dolls in a plastic bag then put them in the large Wegman’s insulated bag. Here are the dolls I brought with me to Katsucon from left to right: Orient Doll Ji, Soom Mini-Gem Uyoo, Soul Doll Kimmy, and Bobobie Sunny.

Katsucon 2013

I arrived at the meetup right at the 2 p.m. start time. The Asian ball-jointed doll meetup went off pretty well for me with no drama. Everyone was pretty nice and I got a chance to see some gorgeous dolls. Here are the photos I took of that meetup.

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After the Asian ball-jointed doll meetup I walked around and took photos of cosplayers and people carrying various plushies until my cell phone battery finally died.

Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013

Someone cosplayed as Merida from the Disney/Pixar film Brave.

Katsucon 2013

This cosplayer was in a wheelchair yet was still able to rock it in this awesome looking costume.

Katsucon 2013

This cosplayer in the next photo appeared as his personal fursona Azure.

Katsucon 2013
Katsucon 2013
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Katsucon 2013

Here’s Belle from the Disney film Beauty and the Beast.

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Spiderman poses with a friend.

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It’s a unicorn!

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According to the comments and messages I got through Flickr, the woman in the next photo was cosplaying as Kougoyku Ren from the Japanese anime Magi.

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The last two photos feature a total blast from my own past. Yes, it’s Gumby!

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I attended my first panel at Katsucon. It was called "Publishing for the Speciality Market" and I was mildly curious about the topic since I can draw and write and it was supposed to provide tips on how to make an income off of your work. That panel was a definite eye-opener. It’s disheartening to hear that there is only one major distributor of comic books in the United States (Diamond Comics) so if your idea for a comic book gets rejected by this one publisher, you don’t really have any alternatives. As for me, I could see myself maybe doing a web comic or digital e-book in some distant future as a hobby but I found that publishing my own comic book/graphic novel to distribute myself or convince Diamond Comics to distribute to be downright daunting and scary.

Immediately after the first panel ended I attended a second panel called "Bad Anime, Bad!" That one is definitely self-explanatory. I saw clips of anime that have either a) awful animation, b) lousy dialogue, c) poor translation, or d) all of the above. I’ve seen this same panel at other anime conventions in the past and it’s amazing that the guy who runs it always gets new examples of anime so bad that it’s really hilarious.

After watching bad anime, I settled down in the Gaylord Hotel and Convention Center lobby to eat a pre-packaged dinner that I brought with me. What was funny was that I had some people sitting near me asked me where I got my dinner from and they seemed disheartened when I said "Wegman’s." (LOL!)

After dinner I managed to attend one last panel in the evening. It was called "Steampunk to Cyberpunk: A History" and it was an interesting presentation that compared the steampunk with cyberpunk sub-genres of science fiction. When that panel ended I was so exhausted that I decided to drive back home. (In order to save money I opted to commute to this convention instead of staying at any of the hotels located in National Harbor.) I had this harrowing commute because it was raining very hard and the streets were so slick that they resembled mirrors. On top of it there were crazy drivers on the road who were speeding on these very slick roads and it was a challenge to avoid accidents. At least I made it home okay.

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