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Japanese Artist Fills In Their Anime-Inspired Cutouts With Their Surroundings (100 Pics)
This Japanese artist creates paper cutouts that they then fill in using landscapes and the environment around them. The artist named Kotetsu especially enjoys nature backgrounds, but we can also see many architectural designs. Kotetsu's characters are anime-inspired and they come to life and are filled with color by the many backgrounds the artist uses for them. Pencils or pens would probably not be able to imitate that.
What do you think of this idea? What about the art itself? Tell us in the comments and don't forget to upvote your favorite artwork! And go show some love to Kotetsu on their social media.
More info: Instagram | twitter.com
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This one is absolutely gorgeous! I love how she's playing around with a 2-D image and tricking the eye into reading it as 3-D. And how delicate some of those cuts are!
It looks like for whatever reason they photoshopped their hand into the picture, as seen by the blurry outline around their hand. They might have photoshopped the drawing over the background as well.
I love how her feet are blurred to make them look like they're under water. That's amazing and is such a tiny detail that adds to the overall feel of the kirigami.
It's really hard to see the cut out areas in this one. It just looks like a painted/drawn picture.
i love these... but how did they cut them out so intricately? if I tried I'd probably murder myself
It's called kirigami, the art of paper cutting. It's evolved to be just as intricate and detailed as origami can be. Using negative space (the cut out areas), combined with pen and ink art can produce some amazingly stunning results. You use exacto blades and really really tiny art scissors to make the cuts. There are some amazing artists all over the world that use this as their medium.
Load More Replies...i love these... but how did they cut them out so intricately? if I tried I'd probably murder myself
It's called kirigami, the art of paper cutting. It's evolved to be just as intricate and detailed as origami can be. Using negative space (the cut out areas), combined with pen and ink art can produce some amazingly stunning results. You use exacto blades and really really tiny art scissors to make the cuts. There are some amazing artists all over the world that use this as their medium.
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