Dream wrote:Most certainly, it's just that in my experience when this topic comes up some people say that none of Hanako's fans would like her or stand to look at her if her scars were rendered realistically, which i feel is a bit of an hyperbole. They would certainly be shocking or jarring, but Hanako's not the Phantom of the Opera
I would agree with that, but then again, it's easy enough to say that. I just think that if skin like that bothers you, Hanako's skin probably would, too.
By the way, what i meant by professionalism is more a localized matter regarding the KS forums, since the fan-art section is also intended for people who want to have fun or an expression of their fandom throught the creation of something, with the technical quality and effort put into it only as a secondary concern.
Yeah, I get that. I'm not saying that people have to yearn for their skills to improve, I'm just saying that if they are yearning for that, a refusal to use reference isn't helping.
Oddball wrote:Most of those scars in the link seem rather fresh.
Like I said before, I'm only referring to the one I linked to directly, not any of the others below it. My fault for not being clear.
Woody Alien wrote:It's creepy as hell! Couldn't they just use the usual black bar over the eyes?
It's common practice in dermatological journals, where there's a need to show as much of the skin as possible. It's also pretty pointless.
A Forum Member wrote:I have been thinking about that, if you get serious burns on areas of the head where hair grows, then it shouldn't grow back, right? Shouldn't Hanako be partially bald and look pretty atrocious?
Yeah, and it
seems like it's still an unsolved problem in reconstructive surgery. Maybe her hair was really, really wet and short at the time?
KeiichiO wrote:Of course, if her scarring was depicted as more realistic like in the supplied photos, the sight might take time to get used to, but I honestly don't think they'd diminish her overall cuteness.
I'm not sure if any of you will agree with me, and I'm probably just trying to be overly optimistic, but I try and view Hanako's scarring as an extended beauty mark, though, it'd probably be hard to view it like this in real life...
No, I think you're right about this. I know it wouldn't bother me, but for various reasons I'm used to seeing much worse than that by now, and I wasn't sure if that's why it didn't bother me.
pandaphil wrote:Anyway, did some Googling...
So the reason I linked directly to a peer reviewed paper on burn scars is that most of the Google image results are definitely makeup or photoshop (at least one of the images you linked clearly is). The image I referenced is something that dermatological researchers explicitly considered a significant recovery, and it doesn't match up with most of those images. It's hard to know whether what Google spits out is real or not.
Xanatos wrote:Those are all about Hanako-level. Doesn't seem too disfiguring to me. And people were bullying Hanako over this...What assholes.
Doesn't that suggest that her scars might actually be worse than that?
Xanatos wrote:A) The actual look of such severe burns would be a bother to accurately replicate in an anime-esque style like KS.
Now this I definitely disagree with. Look at Prince Zuko from Avatar: TLA. One of the key features of burn scars that differentiates them from other lesions is what's called skin contracture, and the avatar animators captured that pretty well. By contrast, Hanako's skin looks identical on both sides save for discoloration on her right (not that I'm saying that's this terrible thing, just that it is possible to be more true to reality with these things in this style).