Just a bunch of bunnies who've done what bunnies do. I didn't bother erasing under the clothing so the doe has a see-through skirt. I always draw in the bodies underneath before drawing in the clothes.
At least you're one of those rare artists that actually follows the Rule of Circles! :) Your technique of drawing the clothes on after the body is also normal. (I wish a lot of so-called furry artists actually followed traditional cartooning techniques- It would improve the level of quality around here and FA to some degree.)
And bunnies doin' what bunnies do best, that's always a plus... ;)
d.m.f.
At least you're one of those rare artists that actually follows the Rule of Circles! :) Your techniq
I always like to construct characters solidly so everything looks connected even if it's going to be covered up in the final product. That way you can get the overall composition of the pose down. I've had more trouble making characters look natural with flow and movement than putting them together. You're right that there's a lot of art around that isn't that way. Torsos are stretched out and limbs seem to come out of nowhere. The worst is twisted bodies where one part (plot, for example) hides the torso and the upper body and head just appear from behind it somehow. It looks awful.
I posted this little picture as a friends only preview late last night. It's based on a pose from a vidcap but changed and I did draw in the torso lightly in HB before darkening everything with a Stabilo pencil. So I hope his hands looks like they're in the right places, not whole arms sticking out like they do on Fairly Oddparents or something like that.
Did you see the scan of Frank Tashlin's book that was posted on Cartoonbrew? His geometrical construction method goes a bit overboard I think.
I always like to construct characters solidly so everything looks connected even if it's going to be