The last child for this batch, with groovy tie-dye.

The last child for this batch, with groovy tie-dye.

A boy with longer, shaggy hair. The hair reference the client gave me for this one was a picture of D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai as Bear Smallhill in Reservation dogs.
I’m not really sure why, but some of the characters in this project were supposed to be drawn with them holding up their hand(s) as if holding something. This was a collaborative project, with different artists handing different parts, so that’s not too weird. But I was never told what they were to be holding. Any guesses?

Next comes three characters in the 10-12 age range. The colorful sweater and space buns were cute, I thought.

The last one for age 7-9 for this batch. A gender ambiguous child wearing a letterman jacket and a beaded necklace.

Here’s the first larger body size character for this batch. A boy aged 7-9.

Another girl, aged 7-9. I really like her rainbow-colored shirt. I based it on one my daughter had years ago that I always liked.

No fooling, we’re only a third of the way through this project. Lots more to come.
Here’s one of our gender non-conforming or ambiguous characters. Since they’re indigenous, the braid isn’t a gender indicator, and the clothing is intentionally gender neutral.
I think I may have drawn them to read a bit older than the 7-9 I was going for. Maybe I should have rounded that chin a little more. Maybe smaller hands. I have mentioned before that this project was scheduled a bit tight, right?

A boy with a puffer vest and shaggy hair.

Moving on to age 7-9. A girl with a starry blue dress.

Here’s a little boy with glasses and a missing tooth. If I did it right, he should look to be somewhere in the 4-6 age range.
