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Japanese manga has developed a visual language or iconography for expressing emotion and other internal character states. This drawing style has also migrated into anime, as many manga are adapted into television shows and films and some of the well-known animation studios are founded by manga artists.
Frame Arms Girl (Japanese: フレームアームズ・ガール, Hepburn: Furēmu Āmuzu Gāru) is a series of heavily customizable model kit girls produced by Kotobukiya, originally released in 2015 as a moé reimagining of the more traditional, equally customizable Frame Arms mecha line and acts as a sister series to the Megami Device line of more traditional, non-derivative mecha musume ...
Naturally, Mai wants to become a magician herself, just like her hero, the fabulous legend Emily Howell. Unfortunately, because she is still a young girl, she is very clumsy and unsure. One day, while helping her grandfather move things, Mai sees a strange light enter an odd, heart-shaped mirror and turn into a mirror fairy named Topo.
Lovelitchi wears a pink dress with a blue bow, two sets of pink beads on her ears (with the set on her right having two pink hearts), blue tights and a pink purse shaped like a heart. Previously, she wore a blue dress with a light pink fluffy collar, blue bows on her ears, magenta tights and the same pink heart purse.
The Kyo Kara Maoh! light novel, anime, and manga series features a cast of characters created by Tomo Takabayashi and Temari Matsumoto.The story mainly takes place in an alternate world, in a country called The Great Demon Kingdom (眞魔国, Shin Makoku).
An anime film titled Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha: The Movie 1st and adapted from the anime television series was released in Japan on January 23, 2010. [23] Aniplex displayed a trailer of the film as well as character-design sketches and original drawings at its booth at Tokyo International Anime Fair 2009. [ 24 ]
Guardian Hearts (がぁーでぃあんHearts) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Sae Amatsu, published from 2001 to 2005 in Monthly Shōnen Ace.. An OVA series was released in 2003, with three sets of episodes.
The first of the K.R.T. Girls, Sora, debuted in early November 2014 at two-day event for independent comic and video game creators hosted in Kaohsiung. [6] They were created through a joint effort between the transport company and a team of animated artists to promote the subway and increase revenue. [3]