Jul 27, 2012

Countdown 27: July 26


Page Source: http://imgur.com/5gTNC\


  • 1 hour 1 minute
  • Sky isn't light enough.
  • Clouds aren't the right values.
  • Foreground isn't dark enough.
V Combining Forms
  • Corners of boxes initiates/terminates stretch marks.
Hampton Studies (22 - 28)


Weatherly Studies (16 - 20)

Elephant needs more jaw.

Countdown 28: July 25





  • 1 hour
  • Darker cast shadow on forest. Darker cliff side.
  • Work on sky.
  • Limit different brush to different depths.
  • Darker green overall.
V Box Forms
  • Check List
    • Gesture
    • Proportions
    • Verticals
    • Horizontals
    • Diagonals
    • Curves
    • Positive/Negative Space
  • Cylinder may show depth but cubes show the faces of the front and sides and possibly twists.
  • Angular cross to substitute cross and cubes?
  • Or cross with edge instead of cubes.
Hampton Studies (15 - 22)



Weatherly Studies (11 - 15)



Jul 25, 2012

Countdown 29: July 24


Page Source: http://imgur.com/epZoq


I sure do love the complicated paintings.
  • 1 hour
  • More accuracy with the shapes. Rushing too quickly with the painting.
  • Hotter yellow.
  • More blending with the atmospheric perspective.
  • Fix path.
  • Darker shadows
V Spherical Forms

Sphere
  • A mind completes a circle even if it's made up of segments that is only 2/3 of its fullness.
Tools at disposal:
  • Opposing curves/transition
  • Cross contours
  • Spherical forms with center line.
Masters:
  • Da Vinci
  • Michelangelo
  • Raphael
Hampton Studies (8 - 14)



Weatherly Studies (6 - 10)

Bad Figure Drawings

Not my best, but I thought to post them for future reference. First two are 2 minutes with china markers. Last two are 5 minutes with china markers and a Prismacolor brush tip marker. At the bottom is my Hampton studies.



Hampton Studies

Weatherly Studies

Jul 24, 2012

Countdown 30: July 23

1 Speed Painting

25 V
1 V Daily

241 H
7 Daily

165 W
5 Daily



  • 1 hour.
  • Under the effect of a sleeping pill. I will critique in the morning.
Figure Drawing: Design and Invention - Michael Hampton
Vilppu notes added in green.

  • Discipline and understanding will bring improvement.
    • Gesture:
      • Gesture = Timing(Opposing Curves) + Cross Contours. Not necessarily the contours or tone. Exaggerate cross contours for clarity.
      • Can come from the ordered and calm use of the drawing medium. It does not necessarily mean chaotic excitement. Communicates a clear action. A gesture only seems quickly done because of its fluidity.
      • Can be presented as the spine of a figure.
      • Try giving each line meaning in a gesture.
      • Is where  proportions and the sense of balance and weight develops.
        • The human figure is naturally balanced. Though the neck angles forward to suspend the head over the torso, the torso pushes out, balanced by the pelvis. The legs stabilize the body with an S curve.
      • The 8 parts of the body:
        • Head
        • Spine - MOST IMPORTANT
          • S of spine needs to be thought of as 3D.
          • Three areas of spine:
            • Cervical (neck)
            • Thoracic (rib cage)
            • Lumbar (lower rib cage + pelvis)
        • Rib Cage
        • Pelvis
        • Legs
        • Arms
      • Has Story - Communicates a unique sense of positioning/attitude. Body language. Unique character identifier (best friend). Analyze the pose or simulate the pose in the mind.
      • Has C curve/Straight line/S curves which brings:
        • Asymmetry
        • Opposing curves
          • To controls the eyes' downward flow.
          • Different angles or softness/sharpness of the lines provide different experiences.
        • Repetition
          • In which a similar curve is repeated.
          • Which provokes a visual movement with the jumping from end to end of each line.
        • Timing/Speed
          • Which can be slow - With repeating curves (more side to side motion). Use in complex areas (intersections: midsection, shoulders, hips, knee, elbow).
          • Which can be fast - Use along the length of forms. Short line transitions are more detached and quick as opposed to longer line transitions.
          • Using different speed emulates how we actually see. We scan at different speeds, lingering and glossing.
        • Wrapping cross-contours
          • Use drapery to show cross contours. They don't have to be exact and the artist can take liberties with it. Also pretend clothes swings out for a feeling of movement.
          • Never use a straight line in a drawing.
      • Has hard/soft areas:
        • H - Areas of bone
        • S - Areas of muscle and flesh
        • H: Head
        • S: Neck
        • H: Rib cage
        • S: Stomach fat
        • H: Pelvis
        • Hard texture - Bone, landmark. Plane change, cast shadow. Quick scan.
        • Soft texture - Side of pencil. Muscle, fat. Slow scan.
      • Center of gravity:
        • For interesting poses, exaggerate it. Have the major masses be off of the center line.
        • Seated poses may have the weight on the arms or require an upright position in the upper body.
  • Exercise for breaking from stiff poses:
    • "About to" pose - a pose in mid action since stiff poses are static ones that have yet to begin an action or has ended it.
    • Gesture from head to the weight bearing leg. This flow should be on a diagonal. Add the other leg near the center of gravity and it will come out to be an "about to" pose.
  • Construction
    • The skeleton is the stage designed to give the feel of weight. Transitional stage in developing volume.
    • Landmarks
      • Areas of bone that visibly push through the flesh.
      • Pit of neck.
      • Clavicles. Handlebars of a bicycle. Levers that allow the arms to move around and away from the rib cage. Position changes depending on the arm.
      • Manubrium. Clavicles pivot from this.
      • Sternum. Fuses the bones of the rib cage together in the front. With the manubrium, looks like a neck tie.
      • End of thoracic arch of the rib cage.
      • Belly button.
      • Ends of iliac crest of the pelvis.
      • Bottom of the pubic bone.
      • Back:
        • Base of cranial notch.
        • Spine. Ends at the sacrum.
        • Sacrum.
        • Seventh cervical vertebrae. Pronounced area of bone.
        • Scapulae. Free floating. Guide and aid arm movements.
The Weatherly Guide to Drawing Animals
  • Fundamental Drawing Principles
    • Action
      • Motion, fluidity
      • Draw from shoulder.
    • Construction
      • Solidity, 3 dimensional 
    • Anatomy
  • Draw from life:
    • Reveals form and working anatomy.
    • Builds a mental library of animal knowledge.
    • Analyze and conceptualize. Animals will move so impossible to copy.
    • Drawing from life is drawing from imagination as well because of animal moving.
  • Observation
    • What is happening to the form?
    • Where is the weight shifting?
    • What is the mode of locomotion?
    • What is happening to the skeletal and muscular systems as they move?
    • What are the various attitudes and behaviors?
    • How do they stand up or lay down?
    • What are the ears and tails like in certain attitudes?
  • From photographs and video
    • Little value in drawing from then unless anatomy and structure is understood.
    • Lose solidity and life.
    • Camera does not see form, three dimensions, and it distorts.
  • Gesture
    • Keep pen moving around the form without taking it off the page.
    • Form and motion.
    • Approaches
      • Brush pen. Economical.
      • Brush pen. Scribble
      • Ink pen. Economical. Relaxed.
      • Ink pen. Scribble
      • Ink pen with long flows.
      • Wax pencil with simple flow.
  • Action
    • Line of action - Can be the sweeping motion of spine.
      • Should have attitude, posture, and direction.
  • Rhythm
    • Strong sense of flow that makes the process look easy.
    • Long and curved. Not short and choppy.

Jul 21, 2012

Summer Practice 24

 http://www.flickr.com/photos/79506329@N00/7466896838/


  • More values on the path.
  • Darker at the end of the path.
  • Correct value and shape for that structure in the middle.
  • More atmospheric perspective.

Summer Practice 23

http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3482/3177497405_b5405cebbf_o.jpg


  • Darker green.
  • More green saturation in the water.
  • Less shapes in the water.
  • Darker on the mountain and its highlight.
  • Clear indication of depth.

Jul 17, 2012

The Figures Neath My Bed

Found these underneath my bed. Some good. Some bad but I liked what I was going for. If the time isn't indicated on the page itself then I can only guess at them.











Musculature Chart


Jul 16, 2012

WWI: 1 and 2

My friends at school are having a weekly themed illustration project. The first week was turtle. The second was superhero. I think I improved between the two but I do need to work on background.


For this illustration, I liked the thumbnails but as I went along, I was burned out by the amount of people.

  • Less people to increase quality.
  • Less reliance on line.
  • Need better lighting.
  • More colors.
  • Hard and soft shadows.



I was pleased with this one till I got to the end. Jessica pointed out that his hands are too small and I realize his gloves are wrong. Wanted to do the whole team but from last time, I figure I should concentrate on one to make it better. Thanks to Veronica Otto and Jessica Tong for their help.

  • Better background.
  • Bigger hands.


Jul 14, 2012

Infinite Nebula Alien Concepts

Infinite Nebula

Richard Thayer asked me to assist in his student project, Infinite Nebula. It'll be a collab comic with artists of many different styles. I thought it'd be a good experience since I need to work on following orders and giving less attitude to my higher ups.

Also Richie's interested in things that are out of my comfort zone so it would also force me to draw things that I'm not used to, such as aliens. After a while, I found that I liked doing them.





Jul 13, 2012

Ani 113B Trees

     I'm not very good at trees but I'm pleased with how these turned out seeing as how I've started learning that semester. Of course for every decent tree here, there's a couple of bad ones thrown away. These range from an hour to 3.