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Published: 2009-09-07 02:48:27 +0000 UTC; Views: 1830; Favourites: 32; Downloads: 31
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Description
Just for fun, mostly. I'm in a costume history class where doodling visual notes on the clothes is encouraged; and as we were studying the 1830's, I started to doodle Izayoi in the clothes, and it sort of went from there. Eventually it evolved into the Enrai main/supporting cast.From the right there, 1830's Papa, Toddler!Yasha, Izayoi, Tanetenma, and Amako (Izayoi's little sister, who may not have gotten much screentime yet, but she will soon enough).
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Comments: 14
InuHanyou [2010-02-12 22:15:02 +0000 UTC]
LOL!! Toddler!Inu wearing a jumper is too dang adorable!!
Love how distinguished Tante-sama is looking!
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Hanyou-no-miko In reply to InuHanyou [2010-02-13 02:58:04 +0000 UTC]
Haha. He is like "I'm. Too sexy for my jacket."
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InuHanyou In reply to Hanyou-no-miko [2010-02-13 11:45:42 +0000 UTC]
LOL! That's it perfectly!
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Lux-Dragon-of-Light [2009-09-07 17:20:47 +0000 UTC]
Wow this is really cute. The detail in your doodles still amazes me.
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Patches365 [2009-09-07 13:50:51 +0000 UTC]
Oh man, Toddler!Inu is like... D'awwww....
I wonder why characters are always hotter wearing clothing outside of their culture or time period.
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Hanyou-no-miko In reply to Patches365 [2009-09-07 15:22:16 +0000 UTC]
HOMG I know. Originally it was just Izayoi, and then I was like "...waitaminute....little babies all used to wear adorable dress things..." and it evolved into a family portrait and went from there.
Haha, which ones? (And I totally know what you mean. Why is it so fun to play dress-up with characters?)
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Hanyou-no-miko In reply to knittingknots [2009-09-07 12:43:58 +0000 UTC]
It's more like late 1830's transitioning into 1840's. The size of Izayoi's sleeves made me sort of hesitant to call it straight-up 1840's (although she could always just be a little behind the times).
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knittingknots In reply to Hanyou-no-miko [2009-09-07 16:38:43 +0000 UTC]
That's a good way of putting it...I know a lot about 1800's women's clothes. I even have a repro of a book called the Workwoman's Guide which has an array of pattern designs for clothing of the late 1830s...and some patterns from Godey's Ladies Magazine (even an original bound edition for the year after Edgar Allen Poe died), and several knitting books printed in the 1840s, and later) and several repro books from the mid 1800s on various sewing thingies. I used to reenact the 1850s-1860s, so I had to get into in in detail...
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