Rasencero, he deletes the pictures after a while so that's why not many are there now.
btw, the second I saw that picture, I saw Flannery, screamed and scared my mother. One of my best friends on the internet is a huge Flannery fan and is constantly scoring the internet for fanart of her so I can imagine how excited he'll be.
Man, I wish he wouldn't blur his lineart. :/ it makes it look too refined and as someone who looks up to him, I want to see the lineart more homegrown.
I really wanna learn how to draw like him, though. XDDD Then I could draw May in whatever I please....*Insert censored thought bubble here*
I could teach you some tips. Of course you'd have to know how to draw and have a program that can do fancy artwork like Gimp at least. If you don't want the artwork to look PERFECT, you don't need a tablet and can rely on beizers and paths.
It's not an easy language to learn (then again, neither is English!). Consider that you have three written languages (kanji, hiragana, and katakana) and the spoken language to learn... grammatical structure and proper writing/speaking techniques... cultural context... etc.
If you really want to learn, see if any local [community] colleges offer classes. Or buy some tutorial stuff. Like those Instant Immersion or Rosetta Stone software bundles. Can't guarantee they'll make you a Japanese scholar, but they'll certainly help you in the right direction.
Although Japanese is a tough langage, there are lots of tricks and a lot of it is easier than it looks. For example, the kanji are actually usually not hard at all once you learn what makes a kanji which are several mini-kanji that have meanings which can usually hint the meaning or concept of the kanji itself. Then there are the kanji that are just one-look learning like the kanji for (to go) which is
行く and then the super easy ones like 人 and the numbers. The grammar is both easy and hard. The verbs are easier to learn than Spanish because it doesn't deal with frivlry like who does the verb, instead it concentrates on other aspecvts.
Been learning Japanese for over five years. Start with katakana because all you have to learn is the alphabet because you are essentially reading English.