Friday, 23 April 2010
Faces and Hands
We were given guidelines on how to draw hands and faces.
By drawing out a light circle showing the size of the face, then marking the chin, a curved line for the eyes - which connects to the ears, showing the angle of the face, marking out the nose and the mouth, and filling in the reast of the details afterwards, it becomes much more easy to position features of the face, instead of just roughly guessing where each individual feature is positioned.


For hands we were told to draw a rough rectangle shape, representing the palm, and draw little cirlces for all the joints of the fingers to get the angle right. Also by drawing the shape made by the tips of the fingers using light lines, it becomes much easier to understand how long the fingers should be and how they should be positioned.


By drawing out a light circle showing the size of the face, then marking the chin, a curved line for the eyes - which connects to the ears, showing the angle of the face, marking out the nose and the mouth, and filling in the reast of the details afterwards, it becomes much more easy to position features of the face, instead of just roughly guessing where each individual feature is positioned.
For hands we were told to draw a rough rectangle shape, representing the palm, and draw little cirlces for all the joints of the fingers to get the angle right. Also by drawing the shape made by the tips of the fingers using light lines, it becomes much easier to understand how long the fingers should be and how they should be positioned.
props
interacting figures
5 minute, 3 minute, 2 minute, 1 minute drawings
These were consecutively... 5 minute, 3 minute, 2 minute and 1 minute drawings, designed to help us quickly figure out the rough position of the model without bothering with the details to start off with - so we can learn to do this first when drawing anything and then put the detail on afterwards.



By drawing these from a slightly longer time frame, to a very short one we gradually got quicker at getting the rough pose on the page and this helped with figuring out where everything was positioned in relation to the rest of the figure. If we mapped out the rough figure first, then we could easily correct it afterwards, having a base to work from, making our drawings much more in proportion.
By drawing these from a slightly longer time frame, to a very short one we gradually got quicker at getting the rough pose on the page and this helped with figuring out where everything was positioned in relation to the rest of the figure. If we mapped out the rough figure first, then we could easily correct it afterwards, having a base to work from, making our drawings much more in proportion.
Movement
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)