Glitter Force Elemental Character Concept Sheet

Character design drawing on paperAnonymous contemporary student or fan artist

Glitter Force Elemental Character Concept Sheet

Style & Movement

Contemporary Fan Art / Mahō Shōjo (Magical Girl) aesthetic influenced by anime/manga styles

Medium & Technique

Black ink or fine-liner pen on white paper; line art technique featuring clean contouring without shading

Creation Period

Early 21st Century (Circa 2015–2024)

Dimensions & Format

Approximately 8.5 x 11 inches (standard letter size); landscape orientation with a 5x2 grid layout

Subject Description

A grid-based character study sheet featuring nine iterations of stylized female characters inspired by the Glitter Force (Smile PreCure!) franchise. The top row features 'Glitter Fire', 'Glitter Water', 'Glitter Earth', 'Glitter Air', and 'Glitter Lightning'. The bottom row shows 'Glitter Fairy', 'Glitter Ice', 'Glitter Music', and 'Glitter Time', with 'Glitter Normal' left blank. Each character wears a variations of a magical girl uniform with heart and bow motifs.

Condition & Value Assessment

Condition Assessment

Good; the paper is unmounted and shows slight surface undulation and minor creasing from handling

Estimated Market Value

$10 – $30 USD

Auction Estimate

$5 – $25 USD

Provenance History

Acquired directly from the artist; likely a private creation for personal portfolio or online art community

Art Historical Significance

Represents the 'fan art' phenomenon of the digital age, specifically the Western localization of Japanese 'Precure' media. It documents the creative process of character variation and elemental personalization within a subculture context.

Notable Features

Hand-lettered captions for each elemental type; use of a heart-and-hat motif across multiple iterations; clean, confident line work suggesting a practiced hand in cartooning.

Condition Issues

Minor physical creasing; the artwork is currently unfinished as the 'Glitter Normal' panel is vacant

Conservation Recommendations

Keep flat in an acid-free sleeve; avoid direct sunlight to prevent ink fading and paper yellowing

Identified on 5/9/2026