25 minute drawing 3.29.2024

by Iris Washington, March 29th 2024 © 2024 Iris Washington

Done as part of a 1 hour class.

My current goal is: Better understand human anatomy, so I can render imagined poses

Polyvios Animations

Hello again, Iris.

Nicest job on your sense of forces, spaces, relationships, and tones and the whole. Yet still, I'm still not too craziest in your severe lack of line confidence yet. How would you care to go ahead with just our interactive drawing tutorial here on this site?

The reason behind you going ahead our tutorial is because, your force confidence and consistency can and will become even most boldest and powerful. So, for most info and hints, kindly look into Daniel Coyle's The Little Book of Talent on Kindle and Audible.

My hat's off to you and your most dutiful journey.

Aunt Herbert

Great pose. You simplified the gesture very effectively, pushing its geometry and volumn, while keeping the natural anatomical flow of the body (a bit sad the upper foot didn't fit on the page).

On the hip and the leg I think your shadow values are off, overemphasize details and break the roundness of the thigh. I don't think she is supposed to look that bony. I think the background leg should be in darker shadows (? I dont remember the reference that exactly), which would help to give the shadows on the foreground leg some context and would preserve the overall volume a bit better.

I think your line quality on the solid body parts has still a bit of room to grow, but I love the lines you chose for the hair, as they clearly make a step towards the abstract, which perfectly encapsulates the random atmospheric texture of free flowing hair, and adds an extra touch of playfulness to the gesture.

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Aunt Herbert

OK, on second thought I would revise when I said, that your line quality on the solid body part needs improvement. I think you did make a very small and easily fixable mistake though: You scanned in your image on maximum dpi setting on the scanner. The effect is that your image is displayed huge and overmagnified, in a scale, that you did not intend while drawing. That makes it hard for the viewer to take up the overall composition, and it magnifies the slightest insecurities in your lines.

Easy 10 second fix: Find the button that controls the dpi on your scanner and switch the setting from max to min. That usually works best for hand drawn stuff, as the image will be displayed at roughly the size that you saw it, when you worked at it.

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Iris Washington

Hi! I actually take the pictures with my phone, so I'm wondering what I need to do with the settings on my phone. Can you explain more?

Aunt Herbert

OK, dpi is a measurement for resolution (dots per inch). I guess your camera is set to full resolution. There schould be lower resolution settings. They not only save you memory on your camera, and allow quicker upload and download, but the resulting pictures just naturally show up smaller on a screen.

Given how huge your images are displayed now, I would go straight for the lowest resolution setting.

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Aunt Herbert

OK, dpi is a measurement for resolution (dots per inch). I guess your camera is set to full resolution. There schould be lower resolution settings. They not only save you memory on your camera, and allow quicker upload and download, but the resulting pictures just naturally show up smaller on a screen.

Given how huge your images are displayed now, I would go straight for the lowest resolution setting.

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