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hey welcome to the forums keep working hard
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Nice drawings! I always love traditional stuff. Lookin' forward to more (;
For a crit, the eye on the right (especially the eyebrow) in the 1,5 hr one from the last post looks a bit off, which gives me a feel that there's something wrong with the whole face. Then again, I haven't seen the model in real life, maybe she looked that way. I think the second drawing is better. Maybe in that one her face on the right to her mouth shouldn't be that flat.. Again, it may also depend on the model.
Try to watch these little details the next time, and it will make the drawings even better (:
See ya!
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Hey Budgie, Thanks for pointing that out. That's exactly the kind of critique I was looking for :). I'm going to work hard at getting the head to look symmetrical. Your right, looks like her face is kind of falling off on the right side. If I ever had to draw a model with a lazy eye, I'd probably want to correct it in my drawing anyway. haha. Cheers!
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man i love ur work, such control over charcoal its incredible. keep goin! u got a great understanding of basic forms, and i like that goldfinger studies are there
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Thanks Yolo, I'm happy that my proportions are getting better. I think I need to practice more on value and edges. Still using charcoal and traditional mediums before attempting this stuff in digital :)
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that oil portrait is great man! I really like those gestures too. Since 2008 I have a box of oils but used them just once, I should relly give them a try again. What do you mean with "active marks in lights and passive in shadows"?
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Thanks Valve. Definitley give oils a go if you have the time. You definitely have the skills so I'm sure you'll figure it out just fine. Just like any other medium, it has its pluses and minuses. The pluses being that it dries slow, so you can manipulate it as you wish and come back to it the next day and change stuff. The down side imo, is that its more difficult to get hard edges. Good brushes can help though.
"active marks in lights and passive in shadows" is a comment I wrote down from my teacher Carl Dobsky. I'm taking a figure drawing class with him and he mentioned that my shading had too much visible hatching and marks. He said it's better to have more active marks in the lights and have them more subtle and blended in the shadows. Unless the focus is on shadows of course.
-J
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Beautiful studies and work! You have really great control of your medium, they are great to look at! How did you go about transferring that figure onto bigger paper? It's a step that's always puzzled me with traditional work... keep it up mate ^^
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The way you control your materials is outstanding! I really love the colors in the bouguereau study. Great job :)
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Well, imo it looks like you certainly know what you are doing. I look forward to seeing your progression.