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Mitsukazu Mihara (三原ミツカズ, Mihara Mitsukazu, born October 17, 1970, in Hiroshima) is a Japanese illustrator who helped to influence the Gothic Lolita look through her illustrations, particularly as the cover illustrator for the first eight volumes of the Gothic & Lolita Bible. [1]
Kaori Yuki (由貴 香織里, Yuki Kaori, born December 18 in Tokyo, Japan) is a Japanese manga artist best known for her gothic manga such as Earl Cain, its sequel Godchild, and Angel Sanctuary.
Earl Cain (Japanese: 伯爵カインシリーズ, Hepburn: Hakushaku Kain Shirīzu), also known as Count Cain, is a gothic shōjo manga series written and illustrated by Kaori Yuki.
Initially their roles in the storyline were much smaller, but were expanded within the anime to provide comic relief. They usually have a cameo appearance in each episode saying their catch phrase "Goth-Goth, Loli-Loli" while crossing their own fingers. A notable aspect to their characters is that instead of actively pursuing their crushes ...
Gosick (Japanese: ゴシック, Hepburn: Goshikku, stylized as GOSICK, derived from the word gothic) is a Japanese light novel series written by Kazuki Sakuraba, with illustrations by Hinata Takeda. The series includes 13 novels published by Fujimi Shobo between December 2003 and July 2011.
Manga artist Kaori Yuki has described the setting of Grand Guignol Orchestra as the "Middle Ages (sort of) with a French air." [2] The series takes place in a fictional universe, where a worldwide epidemic of a virus, the Galatea Syndrome (ガラテイア症候群, Garateia Shoukougun), has turned part of the population into guignols (ギニョール, Giniyōru), zombies which resemble ...
Bizenghast is a debut gothic graphic novel series [nb 1] written and illustrated by M. Alice LeGrow.The first seven volumes were published by Tokyopop, with the final volume released in late April 2012. [5]
Kurozakuro (クロザクロ) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yoshinori Natsume.It was serialized in Shogakukan's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday from August 2004 to January 2006 and compiled into seven tankōbon volumes.