MacynSnow wrote: ↑Tue Jul 17, 2018 7:28 pm
My only real problem with this pic is how....unisex it looks.I think it has more to do with the modern animation styles than anything else,it's just all so rounded off.
As an example,picture in your head a Male and Female body side-by-side(
i'll say modestly covered so i don't get yelled at)around the age of 10-11 years old(
as the above picture looks).Now,notice how much more blockier the Male form is than the Female,even at that Age.Now you can't sit there and tell me the above pic couldn't be misconstrued as a Boy given how the Art direction went.
Winter Vinecki, 14 year old triathlete.
Misty Copeland, 14 year old ballerina.
Simone Biles (21), Aly Raisman (24), and Madison Kocian (21), from the U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Team.
The typical secondary sexual characteristics and tertiary sexual characteristics that we expect to see in animation aren’t there... Well, not entirely. They’re definitely wearing feminine clothing, but they’re all lean muscle, low body fat, and wearing no (or very little) makeup.
But look at She-Ra in her Princess Adora identity. Softer curve to the cheeks (indicating more “baby fat”), more slender arms (indicating less strength), a noticeable (if modest) bust, and a greater hip to waist ratio (a key secondary sexual characteristic).
Classic Adora and She-Ra were the exact same physical body in different clothes. New Adora seems to actually undergo a physical transformation into a new and more athletic body.
The show could still suck. I haven’t seen it yet. But I’m digging the character design for now.