chevkoch: Thanks for sharing another one of these. Looks like a moment perfectly captured, attitude, some slight tension in the posture (perhaps from being conscious of being drawn), casual focus on the handheld.
Thanks again, the tension in her posture came from the game (Tetris requires full attention) as she didn't know I was drawing her. Usually, I draw people without announcing it and wait until I'm finished before showing them the result. Even when I sit very closely, the vast majority of people don't realize I'm drawing them regardless of whether they are busy reading/playing etc or not. It puzzles me how they can't notice but it works in my favor as it removes the factor of compliance. Most people don't mind being drawn if they are under the impression that you're not gonna botch it but if they don't know they're being drawn, compliance rises to a convenient 100% naturally.
Here's another sketch of a guy playing the original Call of Duty in LAN, also oblivious to the fact that I was drawing him, he was too busy trying not to get killed in-game.
To quote Léon: "The closer you get to being a pro, the closer you can get to the client." :-P