Should the schoolgirl tag be used when one cannot see the full aspects of the outfit? I feel like it has become an attribute tag for the character itself rather than tagging-what-one-can-see.
You can't even tell if the skirt is high-waist here because of the sleeves and the admiral.
Should the schoolgirl tag be used when one cannot see the full aspects of the outfit? I feel like it has become an attribute tag for the character itself rather than tagging-what-one-can-see.
You can't even tell if the skirt is high-waist here because of the sleeves and the admiral.
Well... How do we handle tags that involve the character's uniform that's partially hidden? Hatakaze is, after all, wearing a Meiji-era school uniform.
I noticed this is a tendency with damaged art where they're sitting down like that. The normal positioning of the secretary sprite means that the girls in sitting poses are effectively "floating", and that causes a bit of a forced perspective effect.
Well... How do we handle tags that involve the character's uniform that's partially hidden? Hatakaze is, after all, wearing a Meiji-era school uniform.
Yes, but "tag what you see" is fairly important in aiding the finding and organization of images. What would happen if a bunch of similar images of non-kancolle copyrights were tagged meiji schoolgirl uniform without most of the visible attributes of it, such as the haori, boots, or had a hakama/pleated skirt of undescript length in a cowboy_shot composition? The tag would fill with examples that could be a meiji-era school uniform, or not.
This is why Danbooru shies away from applying tags to an image based on standard character and uniform appearances, unless otherwise explicitly stated by the artist to be x outfit or y character.