Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture

Instructions

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Step 1: Add a new Selected picture to the next available subpage by clicking the red link and editing. If there are no more red links, edit this page to add the new subpage at the bottom of the list, save, then click your new red link.

Step 2: On the new subpage, paste this code from the subpage layout guide:

{{Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/Layout
  |image=
  |size=
  |caption=
  |text=
  |credit=
  |link=
}}

Step 3: Ensure that the picture is freely licensed before adding it here. Adjust the size if needed to ensure that the picture is not excessively large as compared to the other images. Add a short caption to the picture (see the Manual of Style) and add a short description of the picture in the text field. Credit the source of the image, not the uploader. Lastly, add a relevant link to the article that the image's subject matter covers.

Step 4: Update "max=" to new total for its {{Random portal component}} on the main portal page.

Adding pictures

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Feel free to add any pictures about anime or manga to the list below, within these guidelines:

  • The main subject matter of the picture should be anime/manga-related, such as for voice actors, directors, producers, etc.

Pictures for adding can be found at Category:Anime and Category:manga. If you are unsure or do not know how to add an entry, feel free leave a note on this list's talk page, or on the main portal talk page.

Selected pictures list

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Pictures 1-20

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Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/1

 
Wikipe-tan, one of the unofficial mascots of Wikipedia.
Wikipe-tan, a moe anthropomorphization of Wikipedia. In anime, moe characters are designed to elicit a protective or loving response from the audience. Like many moe characters, Wikipe-tan is a cute young girl.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/2

 
Mahuri, an anime character
An original bishōjo character combining design elements of Mahoro from Mahoromatic and Haruhi Suzumiya from The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/3

 
A revealing figure named Sythatia
Credit: Niabot
Drawing of an original character featuring typical anime and manga elements. It is an example of ecchi, a slang word describing playfully sexual content such as skimpy clothing or partial nudity.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/4

 
Yoshihiro Tatsumi
Yoshihiro Tatsumi, a Japanese manga artist who is widely credited with creating the gekiga style of alternative comics in Japan. He was also the subject of the 2011 film Tatsumi by director Eric Khoo.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/5

 
Hayao Miyazaki
Credit: Thomas Schulz
Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki, a founder of Studio Ghibli, at the 2008 Venice Film Festival. Miyazaki's works include the anime feature films Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984), My Neighbor Totoro (1988) and Spirited Away (2001). Many have been adapted for worldwide releases.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/6

 
A short German "manga" illustrating common techniques for panels and graphic narration.
Credit: Minorou
A short German "manga" illustrating common techniques for panels and graphic narration.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/7

 
Credit: ykkb
Yuri anime and manga involves lesbian relationships. The word yuri (百合) translates to "lily", and is used in Japan to describe sexual or romantic attraction between women in fiction.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/8

 
Bishōnen
Credit: KishiShiotani
An illustration featuring a bishōnen character. In Japanese, the term describes a young man of androgynous beauty.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/9

 
Cosplayers
Credit: mikemol
A group of cosplayers representing characters from the manga series Dragon Ball.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/10

 
Train with a Doreamon livery
A locomotive in a special Doraemon livery at Aomori Station. This locomotive was in use during summer between 1998 to 2002.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/11

[[File:|center|225px|Cover of Weekly Shōnen Magazine]]
Cover of the first issue of Weekly Shōnen Magazine, a magazine dedicated to shōnen manga and published by Kodansha since March 1959.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/12

 
CLAMP
Credit: John (Phoenix) Brown
The members of manga artist group CLAMP, whose works includes the series Cardcaptor Sakura, Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicle and Chobits, among others.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/13

 
Satsuki and Mei’s House
A reproduction of Satsuki and Mei's house in the 1988 Studio Ghibli anime film My Neighbor Totoro.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/14

 
A sample picture of Lolicons
Credit: Kasuga
An example of lolicon, an erotic portrayal of young girls. Critics claim that this genre contributes to actual sexual abuse of children, while others have attempted to refute such claims.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/15

 
An artwork depicting Shōnen-ai
Credit: Sen Cross, Hiji and Ryo at Animexx
An artwork depicting shōnen-ai. Unlike yaoi manga, shōnen-ai manga focus more on romance and do not include explicit sexual content, although they may include implicit sexual content.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/16

 
A manga page
Credit: Kasuga
A page from a short manga featuring Wikipe-tan, Commons-tan, and Quote-tan.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/17

 
A manga-like character in a school swimsuit  
An original drawing of a character wearing a sukumizu (school swimsuit). School swimsuits appear as a common trope in anime and manga, usually as an element of fan service.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/18

 
 
Credit: Hisagi
The 2016 blockbuster anime film Your Name featured many real-life locations. Its ending scene featured these stairs to Suga Shrine in Shinjuku, Tokyo.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/19

 
A drawing depicting a chibi catgirl.
A original drawing depicting a catgirl in chibi style, also known as "super deformed".

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/20

 
A drawing in manga style  
An original drawing of a girl demonstrating "masking", a creative technique commonly utilized in manga.

Pictures 21-40

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Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/21

Wikipe-tan wearing gothic lolita attire. In the 2010s, the fashion trend became more mainstream in Japan, making appearances in anime series such as Oreimo (2010) with the character Kuroneko.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/22

 
Credit: National Film Archive of Japan
A clip from the short film Namakura Gatana (1917), the oldest extant anime work made for cinemas.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/23

 
Credit: National Film Archive of Japan
A clip from the now-lost film Chikara to Onna no Yo no Naka ("Within the World of Power and Women" or "The World of Power and Women") (1933), the first anime to feature a voiceover.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/24

 
Credit: National Film Archive of Japan
A frame from Momotaro: Sacred Sailors (1945), Japan's first animated feature film.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/25

 
Credit: ryunosuke00
An example of a tsundere character. The word is derived from the terms tsun tsun (ツンツン), meaning "to turn away in disgust", and dere dere (デレデレ) meaning "to become affectionate".

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/26

 
Credit: Ryo FUKAsawa
Cosplay outfits from K-On!, a manga and anime series. Anime conventions are popular events for fan cosplay of characters.

Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/27


Portal:Anime and manga/Selected picture/28