| 26 Feb 2000 | Jenni Bravo | Ohh, this is nifty. i've never been able to get this style to look halfway decent. *turns green with envy* GAAH! I'm green! *runs away* | |
| 26 Feb 2000 | MiMichaelchael J McCurdy | What dynamic efficiency! It's fun sometimes to use as few lines as possible. You made it work very well. | |
| 26 Feb 2000 | Amy Antika Naylor | Oooooooh! I love this style!!! I have drawn several animals in the same way, though none are currently on my elfwood gallery. You did a great job! | |
| 27 Feb 2000 | Ursula Vernon | The real clean lines really work well...very nice. Sometimes less is more! It would make a groovy tattoo...although I think you could get away with a suggestion of a claw or finger at the end of one of the arms, so it doesn't look truncated. | |
| 18 Mar 2000 | Joellen Hines | yeah..*smile* have the claw line curving just barely down and toward the body to pull the eye back instead of falling off the page..*giggles* it -is- hard to portray something this nicely in such clean crisp lines. Even the masters struggled! | |
| 17 May 2000 | Olutoyin Fayemi | You should really think about designing logos. You get across the whole figure with only a few lines. Do you draw the entire picture first and eliminate lines or do you just draw the lines? Either way this is excellent.The artist: I normally start off just by sketching the bare outline and then, when I'm inking it, I add the different widths to the lines. | |
| 24 Jun 2001 | Leah Wong | I'm impressed! I love the curved lines! It adds charisma to the piece! I really like it.  The style is nice. The inking is well brought out! Your lines are delicately crisp! Great job! | |