
Okay, I think that’s enough Code Geass for now, don’t you? I jus finished my Yuki Cross/Kuran from Vampire Knight Guilty. Yes, I specifically say vampire Knight Guilty because this is the epic vampire with long hair version. Haha. I might draw her again later.

Also, I loved drawing and colouring Suigintou so much that i’m already working on part II! I had a bit of trouble with the hair but that’s okay, I’ll still make it look epic! I hope..
I have decided to continue my drawing and vector colouring and to keep practicing until I become awesome and pro and all that!! Haha.. My next work after Suigintou was Kallen Kouziki/Stadtfeld from Code Geass.

For this one, I was watching parts of Code Geass R1 and R2 again, including the ending.. When I got to the ending I thought about the whole series again, what Lelouch had done, and the significance of it all.. Rather than drawing Lelouch however, I ended up drawing Kallen partly because of the impact that his life and his existence had on her, and because Maikeru Nirvana likes her quite a bit..
I also started teaching Maikeru how to colour like me with this drawing and he posted it up as well (here). Go have a look and see if there’s any advice you can give him (and/or visit mine and see if there’s any advice you can give me~)
Note: I found this on an old DVD of mine. The creation date was 2007/04/03 – a little something from my HSC year.
Picking myself up from the ground, I gazed around at my surroundings – the silver sky above, the long green grass, the olive forest off in the distance – it all seemed so serene bathed in the soft light.
Why was I there? Where was there? I did not know, but that was not a cause for concern, for the emotion that had swept over me was a strange tranquillity. It was a peaceful feeling, like that which one feels after having returned home following an absence that had been for far too long.
(more…)
Tick tick.
Tick tick.
The sound at the traffic lights was barely audible above the noise of the busy city street – the cars rushing by, the people laughing and chatting incessantly, the woman on the corner preaching some new order, the man outside the station entrance playing the guitar beside his dog, the salespeople standing outside stores with microphones. When you are in such a rush, time seems to slow and yet you fail to notice these things – they simply are faded into the background and ignored.
Yet you notice the ticking, holding you back, reminding you to wait until the time is right. You stand there, waiting for the sudden increase in ticking and transformation of the light to depict the green walking man. It is almost as if the green walking man will set you free, opening the barriers holding you back so you can race forward. Forward to the ext intersection, and the next, however many it takes until you get to your destination.
(more…)
