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©2005-2009 ~Darthmiller
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Submitted: February 13, 2005
Image Size: 308 KB
Resolution: 1203×1459
Comments: 15
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A simple line art picture of Carnage from Spiderman. I was going to clour this but it had already taken me 2 and a half hours and it looked nice the way it was so I left it.

This pic was copied from a smaller pic in a frame of a comic

*this pic is presently being inked and coloured*
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Comments


The left leg looks a tad small and the right maybe a bit too thin at the top of his thigh, but I wouldn't know as I haven't seen Carnage before. The upper body and claws look cool though, and the shading is nicely done in the right style.

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*Insert witty signature here*
It does a little but it was a direct copy from a pic in a comic and Carnages dimensions have a tendency to change as he shapeshifts. Not as noticeable when veiwed at full size
that is just awesome!

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"It lives... out in those woods, in the dark... something... something that's come back from the dead."
-Ash(Evil Dead II)
Thankies. Have just been and looked in your gallery and there is some very good work there, please do more.
Kickass. Carnage lookin' good.

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"Love is in the air! Hatred leads to despair! Go to Hell if you dare. Singing kumbaya will get you there!" - Insanity is Insanity
Thanks, one day I will learn to colour and then I shall colour it. I shall colour it, I shall colour it!
Carnage is one deadly villian. A thought just occured to me, who came up with the word villian?

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Don't get in a fight you can't win. Or at least know your limits. And admit you will lose.
The etymology of the word is probably Middle English villein from Old French villain, in turn from Late Latin villanus, meaning serf or peasant, someone who is bound to the soil of a villa, which is to say, worked on the equivalent of a plantation in late Antiquity, in Italy or Gaul.[1] Consequently, it meant a person of less than knightly status, and so came to mean a person who was not chivalrous; because many unchivalrous acts, such as treachery or rape, are villainous in the modern sense, and because the word was used as a term of abuse, it took on its modern meaning. A villain can also be a supporter of Aston Villa Football Club, founded in 1874 and an original member of the 1st division although this is more frequently spelled Villan.[2]

Thank you Wikipedia
Cool cool. =)

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Violence is NOT the answer.
It's the question, and the answer is yes.

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