How to Draw Nintendo Heroes and Villains: Difference between revisions
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==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models. | *Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models. | ||
*Kerog may be a translation error of Koopa | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:Publications]] | [[Category:Publications]] |
Revision as of 20:40, January 16, 2016
How to Draw Nintendo Heroes and Villains was a book written by Michael Teitelbaum and illustrated by Ron Zalme. Published in March 2004[1], it shows how to draw Nintendo's famous characters such as Mario, Donkey Kong, and Link. A lot of the images the book teaches you to draw are rendered artworks of the various characters from their respective games. Bowser was infamously called Kerog by mistake; this was fixed in the successor How to Draw Nintendo Greatest Heroes & Villains.
Drawings
The drawings go in order as they appear in the book:
- Mario (close-up of his head only)
- Mario
- Luigi (head only)
- Luigi
- Princess Toadstool
- Toad
- Yoshi
- "Kerog" (Bowser)
- Wario (head only)
- Donkey Kong (head only)
- Donkey Kong
- Diddy Kong
- Tiny Kong
- Chunky Kong
- Snide
- King K. Rool
- Link (Ocarina of Time)
- Link's Body (Ocarina of Time)
- Princess Zelda (Ocarina of Time)
- Armos
- Lizalfos
Trivia
- Tiny Kong and Chunky Kong's artwork are the only artworks based on their in-game models and not their rendered models.
- Kerog may be a translation error of Koopa
References
- ^ Open Library Retrieved December 2, 2010