@HardcoreUvula
absolutely! i like your style a lot, it's very cute and expressive :)
your anatomy could use a little work in places. for example, the wildclaw's neck is much thicker than it should be. on an animal with long jaws, the neck 'connects' further back, rather than right at the top of the chin. i'd recommend looking at reconstructions of dinosaurs like velociraptor as a references for wildclaws - ideally you should always reference directly from life, rather than art, but unfortunately as there aren't any wild velociraptors around today we'll have to make do :P
the feathers stick out a little to me, as well - they're in an odd perspective, and i'm not quite sure how they attach to the back of the neck. and i'm confused by what the brow line is trying to show - it's the top of the eyebrow, but then becomes the bottom of the 'overhang' above the nose? in the 'shrink-wrapped' reconstructions of dinosaurs that have this kind of nasal depression, à la jurassic park, the brow ridge continues along the top of the nose, it doesn't 'fade' into it.
overall, i think your art could really benefit from looking at more pictures of real animals, and trying to adapt what you see to FR dragons. your art is cute and super expressive, but at the moment it's a bit 'flat' - it looks like you need a bit more practise at visualising and rendering 3D shapes, like the bumps on the snapper's chin. hope that helps!
absolutely! i like your style a lot, it's very cute and expressive :)
your anatomy could use a little work in places. for example, the wildclaw's neck is much thicker than it should be. on an animal with long jaws, the neck 'connects' further back, rather than right at the top of the chin. i'd recommend looking at reconstructions of dinosaurs like velociraptor as a references for wildclaws - ideally you should always reference directly from life, rather than art, but unfortunately as there aren't any wild velociraptors around today we'll have to make do :P
the feathers stick out a little to me, as well - they're in an odd perspective, and i'm not quite sure how they attach to the back of the neck. and i'm confused by what the brow line is trying to show - it's the top of the eyebrow, but then becomes the bottom of the 'overhang' above the nose? in the 'shrink-wrapped' reconstructions of dinosaurs that have this kind of nasal depression, à la jurassic park, the brow ridge continues along the top of the nose, it doesn't 'fade' into it.
overall, i think your art could really benefit from looking at more pictures of real animals, and trying to adapt what you see to FR dragons. your art is cute and super expressive, but at the moment it's a bit 'flat' - it looks like you need a bit more practise at visualising and rendering 3D shapes, like the bumps on the snapper's chin. hope that helps!