Who Wrote Orange Series Bl And Where Is Their Bio?

2025-11-07 19:39:47 338

2 Answers

Owen
Owen
2025-11-11 22:27:27
Quick clarification: the widely known 'Orange' is by Ichigo Takano and is a shoujo romance, not a BL work. People sometimes mix titles up because independent BL doujinshi can share common one-word names, so if you actually have a BL called 'Orange' check the cover or the credits — the artist’s name will be listed there. For the mainstream 'Orange' creator, you’ll find a short bio on places like Wikipedia, MyAnimeList, Anime News Network, and the publisher’s official site; those pages summarize their career highlights and list other works. For smaller BL authors, Pixiv and Twitter/X profiles, BOOTH seller pages, and the doujin’s own imprint/credits are where authors usually put their bios and contact links. I like scanning both the publisher listing and the artist’s social accounts to get a quick sense of their style and other projects, and that usually leads me to more interviews or portfolio pages if I want deeper background.
Violet
Violet
2025-11-13 23:49:40
Titles get reused all the time in manga and fandom, so the first thing I did when someone asked me the same question was untangle which 'Orange' they actually meant. The most famous 'Orange' is a shoujo/romance manga by Ichigo Takano — it isn’t a BL title — and it’s the one that got both an anime and a live-action adaptation, so that’s usually what people think of. If you’re holding a book or PDF that’s explicitly labeled BL and called 'Orange', it’s quite likely a different, smaller doujin or indie work by another artist; in that case the creator’s name is the single most useful clue, because many doujin authors only publish on platforms like Pixiv, BOOTH, or on self-published doujin pages. If you want the creator’s bio for the well-known 'Orange' creator, I usually look at several places: the creator’s page on major encyclopedias like Wikipedia, catalog sites such as MyAnimeList or Anime News Network, and the publisher’s product page for the manga volumes (publisher pages often include an author profile or links). For indie/BL doujin authors, Pixiv profiles, Twitter/X bios, BOOTH shops, and the credits page inside the physical book or PDF are goldmines — they often list a short bio, other works, and contact/commissions info. Libraries and bookstore listings (like BookWalker, Amazon JP, or local manga store pages) sometimes include the author name and a short blurb that points you to an official page. Personally, I find it rewarding to track down an author’s social media: a short Twitter/X bio or a Pixiv profile gives voice and personality that you won’t get from a dry encyclopedia entry. if you tell me which edition or publisher is printed on your copy (or the author name on the cover), I could say more specifically which profile to hunt for, but overall I’d start with the credit page of your volume, then cross-check on Wikipedia, MyAnimeList, and Pixiv/Twitter — those combined usually get me the full picture and a few fun behind-the-scenes tidbits to enjoy.
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