03-08-2016, 02:30 PM
Super quick short update to answer a q - not an actual update lmao
Fedodika - babbbyyyyy <3 <3 haha I still hate my sketches. ffaaaahk
Piotr - cheers man <3 Hmm, kind of :/ I feel it, I sometimes capture what I want things to look like and then lose it. All.
neopatogen - Hey you! Cheers for the AC comment, love that series; too bad a stuffed that sketch hard haha
Hmm, I don't believe it is the same curve. That blue curve is one half of the bottom plane - left to be specific - the black curve is actually the central top curve (that's what makes this exercise so difficult) and the red verticals are what find the top curve above for the blue line... If that makes sense? Sorry, I suck at explaining things :/
But to be honest... I'm not even up to that exercise in H2D hahaha. The most important thing I've realised is that I tend to skip over the fundamental -- *easy-looking* -- stuff because I'm like "k lol. easy." but in actual fact, it's only until I actually ingrain the concepts behind the "easy" stuff that the following exercises become much easier.
The same goes for anything we study, I've found.
I hope that helps! Although, I may just be rambling ahah. Take what you will from my jibber jabber :)
And not to reply to le sketchbook without a drawing
Hogarth study 1
Fedodika - babbbyyyyy <3 <3 haha I still hate my sketches. ffaaaahk
Piotr - cheers man <3 Hmm, kind of :/ I feel it, I sometimes capture what I want things to look like and then lose it. All.
neopatogen - Hey you! Cheers for the AC comment, love that series; too bad a stuffed that sketch hard haha
(03-08-2016, 04:16 AM)neopatogen Wrote: Feeling stupid to ask, but as you seem to understand this topic, could you please tell if the blue curve on page 88 from S. Robertson's book (I made a screenshot) is the same as the top curve? It's been 3 days that I'd been returning to this topic and I just can't get how exactly he transfered that damned top curve from plane x to plane z
Hmm, I don't believe it is the same curve. That blue curve is one half of the bottom plane - left to be specific - the black curve is actually the central top curve (that's what makes this exercise so difficult) and the red verticals are what find the top curve above for the blue line... If that makes sense? Sorry, I suck at explaining things :/
But to be honest... I'm not even up to that exercise in H2D hahaha. The most important thing I've realised is that I tend to skip over the fundamental -- *easy-looking* -- stuff because I'm like "k lol. easy." but in actual fact, it's only until I actually ingrain the concepts behind the "easy" stuff that the following exercises become much easier.
The same goes for anything we study, I've found.
I hope that helps! Although, I may just be rambling ahah. Take what you will from my jibber jabber :)
And not to reply to le sketchbook without a drawing
Hogarth study 1
sketchbook | pg 52
"Not a single thing in this world isn't in the process of becoming something else."
I'll be back - it's an odyssey, after all
"Not a single thing in this world isn't in the process of becoming something else."
I'll be back - it's an odyssey, after all