Guides/Skeletons?

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This topic contains 4 replies, has 2 voices, and was last updated by Kim 10 years ago.

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  • #120

    One thing I'm not sure about is set up skeletons (I don't know the real term for them) Should i just gesture draw the pose, or set up skeletons first for figures in general? I feel it helps. Basically start with stick figures and set spheres where the limbs pivot, and after that make some shapes that are rudimentary. Problem is, it gets really noisy to look at and I lose my place, and when I need to draw the actually SKETCH part, I never quite put in the lines where they would be anatomically correct.

    So any advice on that? Keep in mind i do this for general/own poses, not for the basic gesture drawing. I don't know if it's a bad habit or not, and if it is okay, where can I go to make it better? Thanks.

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    #1074

    I think the use of "skeletons" is extremely common, and largely recommended for artists of all skill levels.

    By "noisy", do you just mean that you find you have too many line and start to get confused? It sounds like you may be drawing the initial skeleton too dark. Have you ever done practice exercises for controlling the darkness you are laying down with your pencil? You may find that this will help you to start feather-light, so that your later lines are easier to lay on top of the skeleton without creating a visual cacophony. Plus, they're really relaxing.

    Gradient exercises are simple to do. Basically, draw 5 boxes, about 1 inch by inch, on a piece of paper. Fill in the boxes from the darkest your pencil can possibly create, to the lightest it can possibly create. It should take 5 minutes tops. Then go on to do your normal drawing practice.

    The next day, draw 6 1x1 boxes, and fill them in from the darkest to the lightest. The following day, draw 7 boxes. The idea is to get ever finer control over the pressure that you put on your pencil, until you can create 20 or more distinct shades of grey with a single pencil.

    About never quite putting them in the anatomically correct place -- this is just practice, and the fact that you are able to look at your drawing and say, this is not quite right, shows progress! Mentally review each of your drawings to see where you went wrong, and just make a mental note of it for the future.

    The other thing about working really light, starting with your skeleton, bubbling in major regions, and then going back and doing your sketch on top of it all, is that you aren't really expected to get each layer 100% right from the get-go. The skeleton layer is your best guess, the spheres layer is your next best guess (and can deviate slightly from the skeleton), and the actual lines are your final guess, and again, can deviate from what's underneath. Each layer improves upon the last.

    This being the case, having super-fine control over how hard you are pressing so that your preparatory layers do not interfere too much with the "final" sketch is of the utmost importance.

    Hope this helps! Sorry if I misunderstood the question. :)

    #1075

    That's very helpful, thank you! I might actually have to try those gradient exercises when I can. :D

    #1076

    Great to hear! :) I really encourage you to try them, they're so simple, you can do them on a bus or train or in the back of a lecture, all you need is a piece of paper and a pencil.

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