Behold! Mediocre art, and various fuckery disguised as studying! I'm a long-time doodler, trying to get serious. Please feel free to rip my work apart, I welcome all crits. Thanks for looking!
Attached, we've got a few face practices, trying to develop a personal style, while also learning the proper curves and facial anatomy. A page of figures, first line is 30 second gestures. 2nd line are a few figures diagrams I learned from Sycra's videos, though mine are still pretty out of whack. And a few longer pose studies.
I think you have a great gesture knowledge and the female figures are pretty good. And btw loving that face from the first male figure on the second page, :P what videos/books are you tackling to improve? :D
pd: suscribed!
would you like me to improve? check my SKETCHBOOK!
@wasgodx
Thanks! I can't help but put an ugly face (or a dong) on most drawings. As far as learning materials, I've been following Proko's videos. I bought his premium Intro to Figure Drawing set, which was a very helpful place to start. Also been watching Syrca and Alphonso Dunn on youtube, both super helpful and free.
@BrushNoir
Thank you! Yeah, I always felt more comfortable drawing dudes, so I've been putting in a lot of time on female figures. Seems that I've flipped, and now my male proportions are all out of whack! I appreciate that observation.
Some rando black/white colored pencil on grey paper drawings.
Faces, faces, faces, until the end of time. They're getting better, but still a ways from where I want to be.
Leg anatomy study from "An Atlas of Anatomy for Artists," by Fritz Schider. Not the best anatomy book I've read from, but it does have a few plates of really nicely simplified anatomy that has been helpful to me.
Random WIP composition for a comic cover idea. Probably not going to finish it...
you draw really good faces, especially the old man on the comic cover
also the male figures are so much better than they were in your first post, fast improvement!
(04-12-2016, 01:11 PM)Triggerpigking Wrote: Ooh nice start dude, good line quality, andd yeah the proko premium vids are fantastic, i'm on his anatomy course currently.
Thank you! How are you liking the anatomy course? Are you using the free vids for that?
(04-12-2016, 05:11 PM)Nada_H Wrote: you draw really good faces, especially the old man on the comic cover
also the male figures are so much better than they were in your first post, fast improvement!
keep it up!
Thanks, Nada_H! I became so focused on getting good at faces that I just ended up feeling unsatisfied with every one I drew. Always nice to hear it's going well despite my own self-criticism. :)
Aaaand a few more posts. A couple digital WIPs. Man, I like, just don't get painting. I'm trying, but I just feel so lost with this topic. Anybody got any tips? Good tutorials? I own (and admittedly haven't really cracked into) "Color and Light: A Guide for the Realist Painter" by James Gurney. That one always comes recommended, but I feel like I don't even have the basic techniques down yet.
A character, called Newl (hence the name) that I draw when I'm trying new things. I made him up a long time ago, not much to him, but he's stupid enough that I can try new techniques on a drawing of him without caring if I'm going to ruin it. Silly, but it gets me past that hurdle.
Western scene a friend asked me to draw, trying to improve my perspective and figure placement with this. Barely started trying to put down colors and gave up!
Good tutorials? i'd reccomend Istebraks youtube channel, she also hosts critique hours every tuesday and thursday and has a google community where people critique eachother, when it comes to understanding light and form she's really good at teaching it.
(04-13-2016, 05:41 AM)Triggerpigking Wrote: Good tutorials? i'd reccomend Istebraks youtube channel, she also hosts critique hours every tuesday and thursday and has a google community where people critique eachother, when it comes to understanding light and form she's really good at teaching it.
Btw if you want good ref for a western shootout, study the Sergio Leone films, that dude was a master of cinematography.
Those form studies are really nice! And you're right, definitely something I should add to my daily routine. Not that I really have one to begin with, which may be my problem in general... At any rate, good advice, thank you!