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Yes purple seems to be a very nice color...
That stocking art doesn't match with the style, as nice as it is...
Or maybe it does.....
English
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Edited by LahDsai: 11/6/2020 4:57:49 PMIt's bothering me too. The shading on the stockings, and to a lesser extent the sweater, doesn't match the face and skirt. It looks like someone mashed three versions of the same picture together or had three artists work on different parts.
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Oh yeah, didn't catch that. Still good though
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To me it looks like someone who's used to drawing manhwa attempting to draw in a more manga style.
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Oh my goodness it is.... dang I can usually tell the two apart but I don't know [i]how[/i] Besides the fact it's colored I mean... Is it the fact one usually looks like it was drawn on MS paint? Or the digital look of it?
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Edited by LahDsai: 11/7/2020 5:03:43 PMManga is traditionally designed for print, which is why they were often black and white (to save money on ink). It's also why anime characters have crazy hair/eye colors. On the rare occasion mangaka were able to use colors (typically for covers), they wanted to use as much as possible, so they forwent black hair and eyes as it seemed "boring". Manga was also traditionally done by hand. As a result, character designs were often less detailed so that new issues could be drafted quickly and were easier to print/read. [b] [/b] By contrast, manhwa is mostly digitally distributed, so color comes at no additional cost. Beyond that, digital art makes things like gradients, fading, and blending colors easier to achieve than with ink, so manhwa capitalizes on this. With the more "realistic" use of color, Korean artists also seem to try differentiating themselves from Japanese by going for a more "realistic" pinup style over a cartoony one common in manga. This preference for "mature" or "sexy" over "cute" is also a a notable difference between K-Pop and J-Pop.