I like the fact how you have a lot of the characters included but the background is were you need the most improvement, it would be a cool idea to have the moon towards the top near kamina along with the stars and towards the bottom would be the earths horizon and then the earths ground itself. (like as the pyramid of people gets taller it reaches the heavens) :D
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4 years, 8 months ago
I love the pose of the picture and the light from above is implemented very well.. i gto into about ep 13 in Tenjou Tenge but never went on and I wish I had cause it looks pretty cool.
About the Crux Gammata ( The Swastika )
Its the ancient Symbol of Buddhism and an actuall symbol/word in the japanese language known as manji. Its a very honrable symbol and I have learned alot about it due to the manga known as Blade Of The Immortal were the main character has taken the Manji (Crux Gammata) as his name and personal symbol. Here is a direct explanation taken fromt he manga (Blade Of The Immortal) explaining the swastika.
The main character in Blade of the Immortal, Manji, has taken the "crux gammata" as both his name and his personal symbol. This symbol is also known as the swastika, a name derived from the Sanskrit svastika (meaning "welfare," from su - "well" +asti - "he is"). As a symbol of prosperity and good fortune, the swastika was widely used throughout the ancient world (for example, appearing often in Mesopotamian coinage), including North and South America and has been used in Japan as a symbol of Buddhism since ancient times. To be precise, the symbol generally used by Japanese Buddhists is the sauvastika, which moves in a counterclockwise direction, and is called manji in Japanese. The arms of the swastika, which point in a clockwise direction, are generally considered a solar symbol. It was this version (the hakenkreuz) that was perverted by the Nazis. The sauvastika generally stands for night and often for magical practices. It is important that readers [or in this case, watchers!] understand the the swastika has ancient and honorable origins, and it is those that apply to this story [deviation], which takes place in the 18th century [ca. 1782-3]. There is no anti-Semitic or pro-Nazi meaning behind the use of the symbol in this story. Those meanings did not exist until 1910.
... if you want you can use this info for your wallpaper comment ;)