- This topic has 902 replies, 107 voices, and was last updated 2 years, 10 months ago by .
- The topic ‘What Famous Fems would you add some serious muscle to if you could?’ is closed to new replies.
Another Munro.
Yeah, that’s from ’73 when she was in “The Golden Voyage of Sinbad”. :blink:
Been watching retro television/movies of late.
If the storyline is good, you forget just how long ago it was made.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)
Did Laura V on p.48.
Unless it’s been done…might I suggest Caity Lotz, Katie Cassidy, and Katrina Law? (All three actresses have appeared in Arrow.)
Jamie alexander
Just have to make a comment here.
There have been a lot of “morphs” in this thread that just use the liquify tool to add a blob of pixels to a woman’s arm and call that a “morph.”
I’m sorry, but as someone who spends hours agonizing over having the perfect hair line, skin shade, small details, and even photo grain.
It is disheartening to come into this thread and see muscle morphs that are just popped out in a few minutes. Separating an actress from a photo then using the liquify tool DOES NOT COUNT AS A MORPH!
If you’re going to go through the trouble of adding muscles to a celebrity, at least put some effort into it. There should be MUSCLE DEFINITION. Veins, striations, separation, mass, form.
Not just a blob of stretched pixels to which someone goes “Boom, done. I have created muscle art.”
No, it’s lazy, it’s sloppy, and it’s doing a disservice to this thread. Grab some photos of female body builders, replace the actress arms or heads and MAKE IT LOOK LIKE MUSCLE.
Examples down below:
Two from me:
Blake Lively
Random “Manip, with head swap”
Some from Edinaus:
and a She-Hulk by Mav:
Do you see the difference? Post more of these and less of the previous ones in this thread. Sorry PD07 for calling you out, but you have the most posts with the liquify tool.
I know where of you speak.
I used to make GTS/FBB photo collages. Blending the cutout(s) to the right kind of background takes hours of time and skillful effort in order to create a plausible illusion that someone can look at with a degree of suspending their sense of disbelief.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)
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