Oh what the heck, I decided I'd scribble that thing now. Now I'm far from competent so chances are I haven't gotten the effect I'm aiming for. In fact, on the "Dobson style" example I might not have gone far
enough looking above. But hopefully I can illustrate the differences.
Kinda went for someone in thirties reacting in horror at something (insert joke about Dobson approaching here) basically an expression that in cartoons, does lead to some wrinklage. The things like eye wrinkle of horrors and the edge of the mouth are a little subtle because the lines were drawn quite thin. Same effect you could get if ALL of the lines were thin. A little detail only needs to be, well, little.
Now (appropriately) tracing the image in an approximate to how Dobson does it and, well, sure I didn't do a good job with the above pic... it's miles better than the one below since, like with Dobson's faces, the details are too many,
too long and too thick. Therefore it becomes
really noticeable. Rather than a detail hinting at cheeks, his mouth corners look like
massive wrinkles you'd see on a character pushing 50-60... except on someone much too young. And as I said, I don't think this image is even that close to how many wrinkles Dobson would put on an expression like that. If anything "moar wrinkles" is pretty much his only means of pushing an expression.
Uh, hopefully that made my point.
