Ahoy there, I am the Pirate Queen by wineglass
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Description
The pirate hat and sword come from the 3D World magazine. I made the figure a bit too big to give her more impact,so it is less realandI tried to show her drifting into the shore and calling out to the people on land.
Comments (4)
janedj
Beautiful!!!!
vincenthebert
Nice!!!!!
MarciaGomes
EXCELENTE OBRA.+++++++5
chrislaarman
Lovely idea, but I'd like to see it reworked: A ship is supposed to float, but partially submerged. You are mixing scales. How you want it to look is up to you. Have a look at (hope the link holds, otherwise search the WWW for images of a drakkar) to see it compared to shallow waves. But the North Atlantic can have waves the length and heighth of such a boat. The holes along the sides of your ship should accomodate as many pairs of oars. So they are supposed to be something like a meter apart (maybe more, maybe less; these ships were crammed with people). The oars at the stern act as rudders - and are supposed to be manned. Anyway, the lady is far too big for the ship (in normal proportions), and so is her sword. I'm not sure if the lady is on top of the boat. Make sure she is, and have her stand firmly. High-heel poses are dangerous on a ship, especially at these relative sizes! The ship is supposed to be sailing to the right, judging from the sails. Somehow it would seem more convincing if the queen would point at something ahead, rather than something passed (but that is easy to be countered). Likewise, it would be more convincing if she had somebody to talk to - be it a parrot. Don't be discouraged! Please show us a version where you have taken scale into account! :-)