Amelie still study - reference - 3hrs+
Besides colour pencils and apples on the table I think this's the first colour study I've ever done? I am a tiny bit less afraid of colour but it still scares me. I spent too long stressing over gradients, shifting colours along the Hue really confuse me and get in the way of my Value but I'm getting a feel for a process. Need to work more generally and not get fiddly.
Should do some artist studies, preferably ones who also use GIMP's (very lacking) brush tools - see how they do it.
If I find the time I'll do a few more in the week.
Montag, 29. August 2011
Donnerstag, 25. August 2011
Faces - LoffelNog
Whoah where did those last 4 days go? When scanning stuff at school, don't forget to collect the files.
Bit of a mixed bag this week; Pencil and then GIMP. I'm still with trouble balancing the features of the face and for the life of me I cannot fix that Aussie. I give up. Subtle lighting in GIMP kicks my butt.
Next week, my greatest fear: Colour.
Montag, 22. August 2011
Gato comes back with hands
Hands and such part II. Internalizing the rules.
I started friday and had to go back to work so the first sketches are stiff copies of a Gaston comic:
The artist stresses the size of the palm so that you have a really fat palm on a tiny wrist. This makes the hands easier to read and therefore expressions easier to catch.
There are some Craig Thompson hands inbetween, he's fantastic with composition and purposeful drawing. There are a lot of hooks and inverted lines in thise hands, the opposite of the fleshy, round hands of Gaston. They seem delicate, young, very dancing, flowing hands. Just like the lines.
There are some hands by Virginie Augustine who mainly works with those modern animation principles which are so popular latley where you use dynamic forms together with one side that has structure and one side that has direction (structure vs. gesture). I don't like them but it's nice to know.
Then some hands by Cyrill Pedrosa who are very abstrakt. Those have a nice, fresh feeling.
In the second pic there's one page with Ralph Steadman hands which are very wonky but have all the necessary clues that a hand needs, the expression, the dimension, the volume.. they are ugly but with meaning.
The rest are all own hands. Somewhere at the bottom of page 1 I got into a flow and pushed some more exaggerated form into these hands so that the expression follows one principle.
So I use rubbery fingers or big palms when necessary, round and stiff forms when necessary.
Then I fall back to stiffness again, then to rubberyness.
I'll also do 50 gesture drawings of people who are dancing.
And the imageshack links of course:
http://imageshack.us/f/200/haende4klein.jpg/
http://imageshack.us/f/845/haende4aklein.jpg/
Sonntag, 21. August 2011
A Bunch of Speedpaintings - By Jottwick
These were all two-hour speedpaintings, mostly just from stock photo reference. I was trying not to over render everything and force myself to make as complete a drawing as I could within the time limit. I drew these in order from left to right, and I think I'm starting to improve my drawing speed. I can further improve on my speedpainting by using more custom brushes and other shortcut methods. I also need to work out the most important parts of the drawing early on, such as perspective, defining the major shape masses and values, and getting the overall composition to look good.
References used (from the top left to right):
1. http://ulvar-stock.deviantart.com/art/Horse-stock-11-74705461
2. http://www.flickr.com/photos/australian-war-memorial/with/2963002903/
3. N/A
4. "Sheltering Oaks" by Maxfield Parrish
5. http://www.123rf.com/photo_9656887_zurich-switzerland--june-4-2011-a-train-with-a-refurbished-pacific-01-202-steam-locomotive-is-ready-.html
6 & 7. http://www.photo-reference-for-comic-artists.com/
8. Cover art for Ennio Morricone: The Legendary Italian Westerns. (It was originally a movie poster for Sergio Leone's Once Upon a Time in the West.)
9. http://depositphotos.com/1319887/stock-photo-Kinds-of-Petra.html
notes on the face
These are not good drawings, they're notes. Notes are never the focus; your focus is your subject, your observation, these are just points I keep in mind.
Besides the usual proportions of the face there's 3 (+1) shadow areas I concentrate on and make sure to be darkest, these are usually the deepest shadows on the face given normal lighting: The Brow, the nose, the mouth, and the chin.
The ears are a fantastic clue; they're the most important indicator as to the tilt of the head; always look for their location, if the bottom of the ear is higher than the nose, the face is tilted down. If the bottom of the ear is lower than the mouth, the face is tilted up. If one ear is larger (or obscured) that means a turn of the head is involved. The ears are the best clue as to the angles of the head.
Any tips appreciate, I'm always learning! Good luck out there!
Edit:
Some other methods of construction, for fast drawings there's the double oval
And slower studies the Bridgman Square - Bridgman loved his squares, also alcohol.
Besides the usual proportions of the face there's 3 (+1) shadow areas I concentrate on and make sure to be darkest, these are usually the deepest shadows on the face given normal lighting: The Brow, the nose, the mouth, and the chin.
The ears are a fantastic clue; they're the most important indicator as to the tilt of the head; always look for their location, if the bottom of the ear is higher than the nose, the face is tilted down. If the bottom of the ear is lower than the mouth, the face is tilted up. If one ear is larger (or obscured) that means a turn of the head is involved. The ears are the best clue as to the angles of the head.
Any tips appreciate, I'm always learning! Good luck out there!
Edit:
Some other methods of construction, for fast drawings there's the double oval
And slower studies the Bridgman Square - Bridgman loved his squares, also alcohol.
Freitag, 19. August 2011
Faces - Shortwings reporting in
Is this thing on? 1...2...3.
Err, hi. I'ma little late. Regardless, here are some faces. I didn't quite reach fifty, but at least I can post the ones I did manage to draw. I've done them all digitally, and in different colors to keep things interesting for myself. You know, because I like colors.
Err, hi. I'm
Yeah, I know, I failed. Don't think of me badly.
Montag, 15. August 2011
Faces - LoffelNog
Whoops, just found one on the camera. Vine charcoal on A3 paper, another face from the newspaper.
Charcoal's becoming my medium of choice for life drawing, but I'm still inexperienced and find it hard to control. Is his left eye too small? It feels small
Faces - LoffelNog
Drawn in an A5 unbranded sketchpad with terrible quality paper, can't grumble, the book was free.
Lady photo studies. I'm a big fan of black wash technique. However wash does not work with pentel brush pens and an aqua brush anywhere near as good as sable, lamp black watercolours, and paper that doesn't bobble. I went straight in with ink, hence the faces are too long.
Studies from faces in the (free) London newspapers. Col-erase and polychromos black pencils. I really like this combination. The col-erase doesn't smudge and grease as much as graphite and the polychromos gives you deep rich blacks.
One for Gato there. Getting a likeness for known figures in drawing is difficult, you need to caricature it a bit - I'm not very good at that, caricature is hard. The couple on the left I went free form with; It's fun to go a bit cubist now and again.
Oh no! I ran out of time. Time for quickies from facebook.
And some quickies from life, London chaps.
Any thoughts appreciated, especially on caricature and balancing the eyes.
Sonntag, 14. August 2011
Feet and Hand Paws- SongDog
Well, this was really difficult, and I only managed to pull out 26 this time around (it's been an extremely hectic week). There are some that I'm proud of and some I'm embarrassed to let people see, but I know this is a learning opportunity for me and therefore we are going to make some mistakes. I'm happy that I've been trying, as poses are getting easier for me, though I still have to work on it. I used a few references, but all are posted on this blog site (save for random lion paws and other things).
The one with the smiley face I don't like, and the thing at the bottom is supposed to be a bear claw that looks totally out of place. I tried and failed, tried and succeeded. :3
I'm proud of most of the top ones, the two on the right, the feet paw below that, and the paw right down in the right corner.
I'm actually proud of all of these except the long skinny one at the bottom, and can see improvement just by looking at anatomy of hands and paws. :3
So next week:
I'm going to draw at least thirty horses, maximum fifty. I really need help with lifelike/realistic horses, because if you don't draw them right they look all weird and distorted- which is how mine usually work.
Next week I'll post helpful horse and movement references.
I'll be focusing on anatomy, realism, expression and movement.
Animal Sketches - Rae
I decided to draw various animals throughout the week, staying away from what I normally draw, which would just be birds. I also sketched each of these from a photograph, and tried to stay away from making them too 'cartoony'.
They are all done in pencil in my sketchbook, except for the last frog and fox where I used my tablet and photoshop.
I had a lot of fun doing a variety like this! But I think I have the general shape of these animals down okay. I'm going to try to do fewer but more detailed pictures this week, focusing on faces, especially canines because I have a lot of trouble with that.
Hands - GatoGato
Focus was on expression and interaction (with things and bodyparts)
I have no idea how many these are, yeah, enough.
Sketches are more or less chronological.
First studies:
getting loose, getting the construction more internalized, more variations of a hand against a surface or in interaction with an object. My focus here is somewhat on the importance of the wrist during different motions.
Page 8 is Al Hirschfeld didn't give me a lot to learn from.
Page 9 is Makani - Makani.deviantart.com
She's good with: Form of hands with solid construction and according to character - bony, fleshy, fat, strong, feminine, male etc.
Language of forms and curves (f.e. hooks for bonier hands, curves for softness, lenght of fingers, tapering at the end of fingers, knuckles, proportions of palm/fingers/wrist)
Study with webcam:
I did two movies of myself, one with general gestures and a second one where I listened to a podcast and bursted in a mix of disgust (hands before mouth) and laughter.
First movie has automatic gestures (smoking, putting on a hat) but stays generic and boring.
Second movie with not-planned emotions works fantastics and gives a lot of spontaneus and thruthfull gestures. Bonus: cool dumb facial expressions (I didn't focus too much on the face).
In the first sketches I tried to group actions together (holding, face - hand interaction) but during the webcam sketches I like the idea of grouping emotions together a lot more. I'll go on with that from now on.
Next thing to do: Record myself during a Skype phone call to get a wider range of spontaneus gestures.First page is Rebecca Sugar, Blousse's hands:
line quality, loosenes, playful exaggeration.
The hands have a certain rubbery, gay character that I enjoy and that I have in my own gestures. Loose construction.
Basics of animation principles, LoAs (lines of action) where I wouldn't expect them. I have to come back to her because there is more to her art that I don't understand yet.
Third page is Earl Oliver Hurst's elegant flowing feminine hands vs. Gazotti's supermassive male hands. This and the earlier Makani sketches gave me the kick to get a short research on the diversity of hands going on.
I will have to go deeper into that because I feel that I haven't complete control and overview over this yet.
Own resaerch: Seeing the diversity in different hands - boney, muscular, fat, strong, soft, long, robust, starving etc.
Veins, loose or rough skin, hair, knuckles and the lack of them and what they mean for believability. The last page of the realistic hands has a stock photo of a viking man who has soft, featureless hands. Compare that to the hand of the gorilla-like hairy redfaced porn actor with the anchor tatto on his forearm who is far more viking than the soft shaved bland model - I like these things, I want to get a mental library of hand types going on.
Ren & Stimpy hands:
This is too much to handle for me. Seemingly simple hands with loose construction with massive ammount of design (the curves are awesomley organic and too complicated for me, I don't get them yet). Interaction and cooperation of hands with themselves, the gesture and the overall figure. Strong exagerrations (the pointing fingers). Contrasts in the form of the hands (square, round, open, fisted) and in the action (hold- pull). Lines of action work together or against each other. A line of action running through the arm and the finger.
This shows the importance of the overall expression of the figure to stray away from the generic hand.
There are too many complicated internalized rules, my head, too much to learn in these.
I'll need to go back to this.
George Carlin about saving the planet and a George Carling record from 1977.
Internalizing what I learned about composition and forms of hands, arms and shoulders from Ren & Stimpy.
Shoulder Forms, compositional forms, loA through hands, through arms, through shoulders, through eye-lines/finger points.
There's a neat one on page 3: generic upward curve in the line of action (green) and a sweet wave curve created through the hands (pink)
On the left he created a triangluar composition with his arm with a focus point on the slightly gay hand gesture to accent the word "aloof".
Going back to Rebecca Sugar.
I used mainly curves on Carlin, Rebecca uses different forms that sometimes don't flow at all.
First picture has chaotic confusion in the fingers. The use of different forms (round, square-ish, Ds or Wedges), curves (soft, hard, wiggly) on the overal hand.
(that's why I took the rough tired last picture with me, he looks confused and the hand isn't really readable)
Next goal:
100 for next sunday.
Focus for the next days:
- Interaction two hands-shoulders-head: gestures with a focal point on animation principles
- Language of form in the expression itself (how the type of line and form reflect the emotion of the character) and in the hand itself (a square hand of a man, the softer organic curves of a female hand etc.)
- Language of form in the expression itself (how the type of line and form reflect the emotion of the character) and in the hand itself (a square hand of a man, the softer organic curves of a female hand etc.)
- Diversity in hands, different types of hand-characters
Edit: BIG IMAGES: the notes are mostly in German, sorry :C
http://imageshack.us/f/542/hands1kl.jpg/
http://imageshack.us/f/843/hands2kl.jpg/
http://imageshack.us/f/28/hands3p.jpg/
Hand and Foot sketches - by Jottwick
Here are some hand and foot studies I drew. I was mainly focusing on construction and foreshortening.
This second page is all studies from Burne Hogarth's Dynamic Figure Drawing.
These are studies from George Bridgman's Constructive Anatomy and The Book of a Hundred Hands.
More Hogarth studies, studies from my own hands, and these:
http://image.shutterstock.com/display_pic_with_logo/171067/171067,1254528598,1/stock-photo-clawed-d-monster-hand-model-over-white-38126230.jpghttp://image.shutterstock.com/display_pic_with_logo/171067/171067,1254528630,1/stock-photo-clawed-d-monster-hand-model-over-white-38126233.jpg
Freitag, 12. August 2011
Here are some links that might be useful for you guys
Bonus Entry:
Share your ressources :D
These might be useful for anyone:
Gesture drawing tool for animals:
Gesture drawing human characters:
action stock photos:
Sweetmoons set of deviantart favorites:
Retroatelier - Hollywood lightning reshots from all kinds of periods
http://www.retroatelier.com/en/models/
http://www.retroatelier.com/en/models/
a vast archive of moviescreenshots
australian war photographs, a lot of funky charismatic faces
Abonnieren
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