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Enchanté by Bagheera

Enchanté

Bagheera

Collab sketch with Balaa Balaa, of our little sheltie girl Kaylee meeting gentleman Bagheera at a ball for the first time. Poor girl is blushing so hard! :> Mara's blushing a little bit for Kaylee, too. They are best friends and Mara actually taught Kaylee a bit about the basics of dancing before she attended the ball, heehee!

This piece actually originated from my desire to explore drawing males wearing high heels. High heels were first invented in the middle-east for the cavalry - so riders can have both hands free to use the bow without falling off the horse. It later became a fashion for men of the nobility. It wasn't until much later that it became a women's fashion, let alone exclusively so.

I do have some mixed feelings toward cross-dressing, namely that women's clothing aren't cut for the shape of a man's body. It doesn't complement its lines correctly (this is not to say you can't cross-dress if you enjoy it, just saying that realistically - not in art - men tend not to look that great wearing women's clothes). I do, however, think clothing with effeminate qualities can look very handsome on men, provided they are specially tailored for men's body shape. :>

I mean, look at that... :> High-heeled boots and vest corset. Ooooh me wants. __

Dated February 2012.

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Category:
Visual / Digital

Comments

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    Yuss, but the difficulty lies in finding clothing that is properly tailored to complement the male figure while still looking beautiful as opposed to handsome.

    Two different things to me and not because of their male vs female inflections.

    • Link

      I think men can be beautiful and handsome at the same time.

      Or rather, put another way... I don't think men can be beautiful in the same way that a woman is - this is not to say that men can't pursue that, if that's the self-image they want. But I personally think that's the wrong approach to take, as men's body is simply built differently, and as much as we say aesthetics is subjective and how beauty is in the eyes of the beholder... there is such a thing as objective aesthetics, which is why art theory exists in the first place. Some things just work better than others; some things complement each other better.

      What we really need is a fashion line for men that specializes in balancing masculinity and femininity. Sticking men inside women's clothing, as I said, simply tend not to work that wlel. :)