This is the first report I've had of this. What browser and device do you use? And do you run with any browser plugins?
It's on my list. I will get to it. It is not necessarily so high priority that I am willing to drop projects that were already in progress.
Sorry, just to clarify - you're saying you experienced this bug today?
Oh bizarre! I'll take a look, thanks for bringing this up.
I hadn't actually pushed a fix previously -- it was broken in an inconsistent way before, so sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn't. But I kicked off the new year with a fix that I hope will make this work consistently going forward! Thank you so much for bringing it to my attention, the inconsistent ones are the hardest for me to detect without help.
Okay, I maybe found something. Lemme see what I can do :)
That is very strange. I haven't uploaded any code changes to the tools (beyond adding images here and there) for several weeks. The holidays is not usually a great time for pushing patches.
I'll poke around and see if I can find anything.
The tutorial pulls randomly from the entire library of poses. It will be a different set of photos every time you run it, just as with any other drawing tool on the site. There are a relatively small number of wheelchair photos in our library compared to others; if you got more than one, it sounds like you had a strange bit of luck. Luckily, if one pose doesn't work for you, you can skip ahead until one does. Yes, a person standing exactly straight could have a stick shaped line of action.
You don't need to draw props or seats or indeed wheelchairs to complete the exercises involved in the tutorial.
Autn Herbert, you have hit the difficulty exactly on the head and described some of the things or at least similar things, to what I have considered to try and overcome it.
Thank you for the heads up!
"Fat isn't a part of human anatomy" is a new one to me.
How fat hangs, compresses, stretches, becomes rolls, adds volume and curve as a model twists and bends and exists is an area of study just like bone, muscle, skin and hair. None of these things exist alone, and to draw a convincing human, study of them all and their interactions is necessary.
If you are currently studying exclusively bone, there are actual skeleton references out there. Ditto muscle.
A pose can be exciting or "lame" regardless of the model's size. Doodlers+ can still hide specific poses they don't find satisfactory.