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If there no class availble in your area i am sure you can find online class for a reasonable price but i suggest you learn how to do proper research there alot of online resource there even a resource section on this forum you should really check it out but you should invest time looking for art content on youtube.
About mentor there little chance you will find a mentor because most of the person who would be mentor are allready art teacher so there not gonna do 1 on 1 session.Those who would do 1 on 1 would be probably less worth to learn from but atleast you get a faster learning curve because you don't have to seek the teacher attention like you would in a art class.
For art job you better not look locally because there the internet now and people use it to find the best person to fill the job.
I think what you really missing is the tool to learn by yourself.
For example do you own any art book?
Do you watch any art tutorial online?
How much time can you spend per day on art?
Those are question you should have answered for yourself already.But i would still like to know.
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My advice would be to still be near artist even if the teacher doesn't specially care for you.I know the feeling there alway talent people who seem to draw all the attention.It rare to find teacher who really understand there role in giving everyone equal chance of sucess.One of the main thing you need first to figure out is how other study.Copy for the sake of copying can really slow your progress.You have to shift your state of mind into an analytic one.
I got a small post for you that might help you unlock the way it possible to shift to this state of mind.
http://crimsondaggers.com/forum/thread-4107.html
The problem with most tutorial is you have to figure out how to translate them into useful practice.
I would say one of your problem at the moment is your not aware of how wrong your angle are.You could make 1 drawing instead of 3 but you seem to not bother making a correct drawing you take 3 shot when you could make it in 1 or 2.
You also have little control of your stroke you often overshot your line.It not bad but it can be done with intention not by accident.
My advice keep drawing cube and learn more about perspective at moment i would say you should stop shading and simply try to interpret image in the language of line.Also breaking down the face into basic form to slowly come to a more accurate result.
One good exercise you can do that can help you practice accurate drawing is to take and image and flip it upside down and to copy it it seem stupid but it useful because it shift how your brain interpret what you see you look more at the image and you interpret less.
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Hey Magnetic, I would say you are moving in the right direction. Your heads are starting to show some appreciation of perspective, probably because of your drawabox and Loomis exercises.
What I'd encourage you to do now is slow down, when you are doing a cube carefully trace the edges back to the appropriate vanishing points. Ghost through your lines before you draw them.
Another useful exercise is to trace over a photo ref. with some construction lines, e.g. take a head ref. and trace a Loomis construction over it. This should help you link construction with real life and help you when you try to construct from your imagination.
Hope that helps, keep going fella, you're moving in the right direction :).
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(10-09-2018, 03:16 PM)darktiste Wrote: My advice would be to still be near artist even if the teacher doesn't specially care for you.I know the feeling there alway talent people who seem to draw all the attention.It rare to find teacher who really understand there role in giving everyone equal chance of sucess.One of the main thing you need first to figure out is how other study.Copy for the sake of copying can really slow your progress.You have to shift your state of mind into an analytic one.
I got a small post for you that might help you unlock the way it possible to shift to this state of mind.
http://crimsondaggers.com/forum/thread-4107.html
The problem with most tutorial is you have to figure out how to translate them into useful practice.
I would say one of your problem at the moment is your not aware of how wrong your angle are.You could make 1 drawing instead of 3 but you seem to not bother making a correct drawing you take 3 shot when you could make it in 1 or 2.
You also have little control of your stroke you often overshot your line.It not bad but it can be done with intention not by accident.
My advice keep drawing cube and learn more about perspective at moment i would say you should stop shading and simply try to interpret image in the language of line.Also breaking down the face into basic form to slowly come to a more accurate result.
One good exercise you can do that can help you practice accurate drawing is to take and image and flip it upside down and to copy it it seem stupid but it useful because it shift how your brain interpret what you see you look more at the image and you interpret less. Well the teachers in these classes make no effort to teach anything at all. They just tell everyone they are good and to draw what they feel. Sometimes they tell their students to ignore criticism all together.
Yes, I realize my line control is very poor and I've been trying to improve it but to no success. I have been breaking the face down into a simplistic form with the Loomis I was practicing. It has little effect though.
I did a couple more draw a box attempts before giving up on it. It's too complicated for me even at the most basic level. I really don't understand how to progress though that site. The videos aren't helpful in any manner.
I have been flipping my drawing upside down. I try to correct what I see but then when I flip it right side up it's still wrong, just in a different manner.
(10-09-2018, 11:26 PM)Artloader Wrote: Hey Magnetic, I would say you are moving in the right direction. Your heads are starting to show some appreciation of perspective, probably because of your drawabox and Loomis exercises.
What I'd encourage you to do now is slow down, when you are doing a cube carefully trace the edges back to the appropriate vanishing points. Ghost through your lines before you draw them.
Another useful exercise is to trace over a photo ref. with some construction lines, e.g. take a head ref. and trace a Loomis construction over it. This should help you link construction with real life and help you when you try to construct from your imagination.
Hope that helps, keep going fella, you're moving in the right direction :).
Drawabox is very complicated. I feel like I'm missing most of the point of it.
I have been drawing over the references but, only fairly basic things like the brow line and angle of the center of the face. I can't seem to get the sphere in the correct position for some reason when I draw over it.
I haven't posted in a while but here are the latest drawings I have. The guys in discord told me to try drawing things i liked and to do some studies so I chose a couple of pieces of box art from some old video games. Sadly things did not go well with those images. I failed to fit the characters into the correct places, possibly due to proportion issues that I have. This really shows my lack of anatomical knowledge as well. I just feel like I don't have the tools to tackle projects like this.
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Well when you try to learn art you can't give up easly or you will just fall back on old habit that aren"t constructive to a well polish approch to drawing this will result in alot of wasted time.I know how easy it is to be tempted to do pretty drawing.But think of an house you can't build a good looking house if the foundation are wrong it will be easy for anyone to spot how poor the construction is.
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I am seeing improvement keep going.But you have to give them there really proportion stick to what you see not what your brain want to see.Yes the brain is playing trick on you like cutting head for example.The reason is the brain is good at seeing face but for most of it translation of reality it store information in the form of symbol rather than high definition image so it good to practice the 10 second method never spend more than 10second looking away from the reference.Also a good thing to practice is framing because sometime beginner have problem fitting subject inside a limited space and will often have to compress image because they under estimated the space the subject would take on the page.A trick i like is to draw smaller or to draw on bigger sheet of paper but ultimately you should learn to draw in a limited space.
The problem is that without a construction method you are lock to what ever reference you have it limit greatly the possiblity.
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Doing heads well, even from reference requires a lot of complex stacked skills and knowledge to work in concert. It would be more beneficial to go back to more basic and easier challenge first and build up. While some of your finals are certainly improving and you are capturing likeness better you still seem to be spinning your wheels on the same thing over and over.
In the discord or perhaps some other times people have recommended observational studies of bargue drawings, cast studies, skull studies, studies of the asaro head, and ofc even more drawing basic primitive objects in various perspectives but it seems you ignored that advice or aren't posting them.
Question: do you measure angles and linear relationships at all when drawing from reference? Comparative measurement is very useful to be able to check whether you are nailing the same angles and proportions of all the various features/landmarks. Dorien Iten explained a bit about this fairly simply but it may require more explanation...do you use it in any of these studies?
I have been studying at an atelier of sorts recently and found this guy who is or was a Watts student. Their process for portraits is rigorous and strong so i am learning a new appreciation for having a process and sticking to it as well as not being lazy with my measuring. He has some videos that show in real-time this process perhaps not all with full explanation but it may be useful for you to watch. This vid is him doing loomis studies https://youtu.be/FnTbqPIkuX0 and he has some on constructive features but also the 20 minute head layins combine the entire Reilly method of head drawing and should be informative to watch. He also explains what he is doing for many of them though it's not specifically a lecture type channel. This is not in lieu of also going back to more basic exercises as mentioned before
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(12-14-2018, 03:13 PM)Amit Dutta Wrote: Doing heads well, even from reference requires a lot of complex stacked skills and knowledge to work in concert. It would be more beneficial to go back to more basic and easier challenge first and build up. While some of your finals are certainly improving and you are capturing likeness better you still seem to be spinning your wheels on the same thing over and over.
In the discord or perhaps some other times people have recommended observational studies of bargue drawings, cast studies, skull studies, studies of the asaro head, and ofc even more drawing basic primitive objects in various perspectives but it seems you ignored that advice or aren't posting them.
Question: do you measure angles and linear relationships at all when drawing from reference? Comparative measurement is very useful to be able to check whether you are nailing the same angles and proportions of all the various features/landmarks. Dorien Iten explained a bit about this fairly simply but it may require more explanation...do you use it in any of these studies?
I have been studying at an atelier of sorts recently and found this guy who is or was a Watts student. Their process for portraits is rigorous and strong so i am learning a new appreciation for having a process and sticking to it as well as not being lazy with my measuring. He has some videos that show in real-time this process perhaps not all with full explanation but it may be useful for you to watch. This vid is him doing loomis studies https://youtu.be/FnTbqPIkuX0 and he has some on constructive features but also the 20 minute head layins combine the entire Reilly method of head drawing and should be informative to watch. He also explains what he is doing for many of them though it's not specifically a lecture type channel. This is not in lieu of also going back to more basic exercises as mentioned before I wanted to focus in something that I feel I'm lacking in so I chose portraits. Unfortunately I haven't gotten that much better. It just frustrates me that it takes me so long to produce such poor (and inaccurate) results.
I have been working on Burt Dodson's Keys to drawing between portaits but, yes I should probably get on the other things (primitive objects, asaro heads,casts and skulls). I suppose I need stop with tunnel vision.
Yes, I attempt to measure angles and even draw over my source image before working on construction. It seems that I exaggerate these angles. Everything I draw ends up having faces or heads tilting too far or not far enough. Maybe I'm not seeing what Dorien is doing. I'll go back over his videos again.
Bradwynn is pretty accurate with his loomis heads; I really need to take a long look at that video and see how to properly do this myself.
For the next few weeks I'll try going back to primitive objects in perspective. I have a few boxes (plus tons of books) sitting around I can set up. They would just be standard rectilinear shapes. Nothing too complex.
The Asaro heads will also be a priority.
These first few are exercises from keys to drawing...
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Copying is an operation of accuracy not of quantity.The only reason you would have additional portrait is if you really work to fast.A drawing should be build in a manageable approach for a beginner.I recommend you go see the #41 post of this thread where i shown you a few technique to visually measure and construction the head.If you avoid loomis you will be kinda doom to copying and will not be able to invent your own stuff.Drawing realistic object inside box is the basis of drawing.
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Better likenesses again esp that dude with the moustache but yeah I think you finally really do need to stop grinding on portraits so much at this point. They are one of the hardest things to get down well. I am STILL confused why and how far 'off' the first iterations of those portraits are. Why do you do that...what is the purpose of allowing yourself to be so sloppy? All you are training is how to draw sloppy shit. Calm down slow down. You really aren't taking advantage of the advice given in the discord and here so I hope you do change it up as you mentioned :)
Having said that the photos you are picking are not ideal. Use ones with one single light source that cast noticeable shadows across the forms, at first. You want to be able to see distinct shadows because that makes it easier to identify, map and then describe form easier. Here are some examples i save on pinterest..not all great but most follow that rule. https://pin.it/vpbvknrvnepez2
I like your dedication but it might be better to focus on the more fundamental things first..such as drawing basic primitive forms believably. Beginners often speed through the actual fundamentals exercises like a schizophrenic thinking just because they spent a bit of time on it they get it. You can see it is very common esp on this forum lol. I like that you aren't doing that but you will get more 'traction' by actually slowing down and training the basics first
You might want to consider online subscription to watts or NMA. Watts has structured basic exercises and video demos with a logical meaningful progression and challenge build up. and I think you would do better with at least some curriculum to follow even if not IRL
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Last thing I will ever say on this, but training accuracy is important. It's not everything but it is esp. Important for beginners or people who can't draw even close to what they see for their lives.
If you can see a difference between your study and the reference then you can measure how off you are. If you can measure how off you are you can correct proportions or any other aspect in your drawings. Often what happens is we CAN'T see the difference with any accuracy even though they exist...this is why measuring and correcting drawing as you go is uber important.
Absolutely zero point spending lots of time on them if you don't try your best to actually fix them. (Maybe you are...i dont know...but it seems like you just let yourself off the hook every time)
This is same reason doing multiple shitty pre drawings for your portraits to test where you might go wrong is really ass backwards. Instead of aiming to get it wrong, aim to get them all right as you can. Multiple studies are definitely good but not if you half ass the main point of them so much.
I see you still cannot draw a basic straight freehand line 1.5yrs down the line. Every single form is wonky and skewed yet you don't seem to fix these and allow yourself to carry on this lazy approach, study after study. I'm not saying this to make you feel bad or wind you up tighter than you already are...but this is a reality you should probably face now.
You could also use a pencil or use different grades that goes darker with a fuller value range. Your drawings all are very light in the shadows
Here's same study from a guy I know doing watts online for a few months. https://www.instagram.com/p/BrTu0VJDnwO/...lk8zxn4e0o
Watts has some great structured exercises...but it's also how you approach them in mindset that matters..Not simply doing mileage for the sake of it. Repeat these basics until you can hold yourself to account better and pull them off well imo.
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It something hard to see detail that evade your understanding.It can be bad angle bad proportion bad lighting bad anatomy bad perspective the list goes on.If you can't spot error it almost impossible to improve.No amount of drawing can improve your observation you have to be conscious of the rule your breaking.This is why you need to make error and other to explain to you the error you make but that not enough because you rely on other to see them for you what you need is to understand .Why you did break them this mean being able to learn theory and apply that theory correctly.
For example on those cylinder you just drew you made a common error newbie does you want to show to much of the ellipse on top and you have problem estimating the degre of the bottom ellipse.You also draw you ellipse in the shape of egg rather then being correct ellipse.Sadly ellipse are a rather hard subject for beginner it not easy to explain because it mix perspective and accuracy and it best if you understand how to properly construct box in perspective first before you try to approch learning how to do cylinder.
Accuracy is more important than a finish drawing because without accuracy you cannot produce quality work.Without the knowledge of fundamental art rule you are limited to copying and relying on reference to much.
Don't get discouraged by the harsh word you receive the compliment won't come without hard work everyone would like to be a genius and draw well without effort.The ''genius'' are only gifted if there can listen to advice and figure out how to come us those advice in a constructive way. Listining isn't enough you have to understand why the critic was constructive.
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(01-25-2019, 08:32 AM)Amit Dutta Wrote: Last thing I will ever say on this, but training accuracy is important. It's not everything but it is esp. Important for beginners or people who can't draw even close to what they see for their lives.
If you can see a difference between your study and the reference then you can measure how off you are. If you can measure how off you are you can correct proportions or any other aspect in your drawings. Often what happens is we CAN'T see the difference with any accuracy even though they exist...this is why measuring and correcting drawing as you go is uber important.
Absolutely zero point spending lots of time on them if you don't try your best to actually fix them. (Maybe you are...i dont know...but it seems like you just let yourself off the hook every time)
This is same reason doing multiple shitty pre drawings for your portraits to test where you might go wrong is really ass backwards. Instead of aiming to get it wrong, aim to get them all right as you can. Multiple studies are definitely good but not if you half ass the main point of them so much.
I see you still cannot draw a basic straight freehand line 1.5yrs down the line. Every single form is wonky and skewed yet you don't seem to fix these and allow yourself to carry on this lazy approach, study after study. I'm not saying this to make you feel bad or wind you up tighter than you already are...but this is a reality you should probably face now.
You could also use a pencil or use different grades that goes darker with a fuller value range. Your drawings all are very light in the shadows
Here's same study from a guy I know doing watts online for a few months. https://www.instagram.com/p/BrTu0VJDnwO/...lk8zxn4e0o
Watts has some great structured exercises...but it's also how you approach them in mindset that matters..Not simply doing mileage for the sake of it. Repeat these basics until you can hold yourself to account better and pull them off well imo. Believe me, I've been putting all my effort into being accurate. I have trouble measuring angles and sizes. It's really driving me insane. After several hours (with breaks) I just get tired of looking at my work and realizing I've been making things worse.
At the moment I'm using cheap pencils marked "2HB" on them. I'm also using some inexpensive mechanical pencils. I'm not pressing down as hard as I could be because I'm afraid of making things impossible to erase. I have an issue where if I go too dark I can't seem to erase back out of it. The eraser I use just smears the graphite on the paper.
(01-25-2019, 10:55 AM)darktiste Wrote: It something hard to see detail that evade your understanding.It can be bad angle bad proportion bad lighting bad anatomy bad perspective the list goes on.If you can't spot error it almost impossible to improve.No amount of drawing can improve your observation you have to be conscious of the rule your breaking.This is why you need to make error and other to explain to you the error you make but that not enough because you rely on other to see them for you what you need is to understand .Why you did break them this mean being able to learn theory and apply that theory correctly.
For example on those cylinder you just drew you made a common error newbie does you want to show to much of the ellipse on top and you have problem estimating the degre of the bottom ellipse.You also draw you ellipse in the shape of egg rather then being correct ellipse.Sadly ellipse are a rather hard subject for beginner it not easy to explain because it mix perspective and accuracy and it best if you understand how to properly construct box in perspective first before you try to approch learning how to do cylinder.
Accuracy is more important than a finish drawing because without accuracy you cannot produce quality work.Without the knowledge of fundamental art rule you are limited to copying and relying on reference to much.
Don't get discouraged by the harsh word you receive the compliment won't come without hard work everyone would like to be a genius and draw well without effort.The ''genius'' are only gifted if there can listen to advice and figure out how to come us those advice in a constructive way. Listining isn't enough you have to understand why the critic was constructive. I've been working on my accuracy as best I can. I'm still attempting to improve as best I can.
Oh, I'm not discouraged by harsh words. I'm just so tired of compliments. Back when I was in college it was impossible to get any critique. The only thing people would do is tell each other how much they liked their work. I hated that so much.
Even begging people to find flaws with my work didn't work, so I'm grateful to anyone showing me where I'm going wrong.
I redid all of the Watts exercises I've been through then added a couple more. Currently on "Drawing Fundamentals Phase II" Video 3.
The Budda bust gave me the most trouble. I ended up spending several hours on it.
I'm terrible at finer details (small ledges, or anything that would require lines to be close together) and texture. unfortunately it shows in this.
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All i have to say is keep using vanishing point and guide for the moment.You keep trying to move to more advance stuff when you should at the moment be focusing on how to properly construct pyramid and cylinder in 1 and 2 point perspective.Your drawing a clearly showing you still shaky in term of perspective and without good perspective copy is possible but inventing is impossible.Without understanding of perspective you cannot even draw life drawing because you don't understand certain principle you must keep consistent.
It hard to tell you what your doing wrong since i can't see you work but i can see the error but it hard for you to understand no one take the time to correct your work.I seriously advice you find an art teacher so that he can solidify your fundamental before you can start your own art journey.You don't wanna form bad habit early on.
Video course might not be the right way to go right now since you need to be corrected by a teacher.
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Hi Scrolls,
if you're struggling with accuracy, I might be able to help. Illustration is not yet my strong suit, but I'm pretty trained at capturing what I see.
https://www.artstation.com/prov the rightmost 4 pieces are still life studies I've done at the atelier I trained at. I can see you're putting in effort, so I want to try to help out. If you want to, you can add me on Discord: Prov (Sjoerd)#8579
We can go over the exercises they do at the atelier to improve accuracy and I can give you some homework and check it. Send me a message on Discord (it's free to create an account) if you're interested.
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Watched Drawing Phase 2 Video 4 (Building Objects with basic forms 1). Thought it would help but, it wasn't informative at all. I just felt confused by this video. I feel like I have missed several lessons that were suppose to come before this. I feel as if nothing else in phase 2 prepared me for this. I honestly want to learn to draw like this.
Video 5 and 6 continue onward past anything I've learned. I'm deeply confused at this point. Watching him draw does nothing for me and he seems to go off on tangents frequently.
I finished Drawing Fundamentals 2 video and I feel vastly unprepared for anything else. Is the rest of the course better structured? I plan on moving on to Head Drawing 1 next.
Contour of the arm....
The last part had me set up a still life. It did not go well at all
The results were poor. I pour a lot of time and effort this and get back pure garbage. I can't stand these results. Do I move forward or do I try it again?
(02-10-2019, 02:31 PM)darktiste Wrote: All i have to say is keep using vanishing point and guide for the moment.You keep trying to move to more advance stuff when you should at the moment be focusing on how to properly construct pyramid and cylinder in 1 and 2 point perspective.Your drawing a clearly showing you still shaky in term of perspective and without good perspective copy is possible but inventing is impossible.Without understanding of perspective you cannot even draw life drawing because you don't understand certain principle you must keep consistent.
It hard to tell you what your doing wrong since i can't see you work but i can see the error but it hard for you to understand no one take the time to correct your work.I seriously advice you find an art teacher so that he can solidify your fundamental before you can start your own art journey.You don't wanna form bad habit early on.
Video course might not be the right way to go right now since you need to be corrected by a teacher.
I'm having a hard time finding a vanishing point in real life. No idea on how to work with ellipses to be honest. The Watts course does not seem to cover that yet.
How can I find an art teacher? The ads I posted up a while back only attracted 3 people and 1 didn't even reply. Nobody locally knows anything other than the courses I've tried so far and asking them just seems to confuse them.
(02-10-2019, 08:32 PM)Prov Wrote: Hi Scrolls,
if you're struggling with accuracy, I might be able to help. Illustration is not yet my strong suit, but I'm pretty trained at capturing what I see.
https://www.artstation.com/prov the rightmost 4 pieces are still life studies I've done at the atelier I trained at. I can see you're putting in effort, so I want to try to help out. If you want to, you can add me on Discord: Prov (Sjoerd)#8579
We can go over the exercises they do at the atelier to improve accuracy and I can give you some homework and check it. Send me a message on Discord (it's free to create an account) if you're interested.
Alright, I started on the Bargue plates. Here is the first one.
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