Polyvios Animations的論壇貼

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  • #31602
    You know, JO, I think you're really getting to be on the right track with your patterns of lights and shadows shapes, but I feel that these are getting to be farther too smoother and slicker yet. How would you like to please go ahead with the stronger and more powerful shapes of tones with 16 minutes of 2 minute poses in lights and shadows please?

    The premise behind this whole thing is because you not need to think of shadows and lights as just shadows and lights, but more so as lines and shapes of them. For more details, kindly look into some online tutorials on how to observe tones for your drawings. Let's hope they've worked out for you for the better.
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    #31597
    Yeah, I think this idea would be greater, too.
    #31586
    Hello JO, and upon looking at your quickest sketches, I must really do say that I think your drawing talents are definitely and absolutely on the rightest track. But I feel that the simplest but most organic forms need most work, so how would you like to please just go ahead doing the bean poses and robobean poses by drawing a series of 2 10 minute poses, as seen in the Proko drawing videos of the bean and robobean torsos?

    As a result, you can and will and shall be able to work the most simplest in the most complicated anatomy shapes, spaces, and forms, even if you could and would use to learn how to draw floursack bodies. My hat's off to you, and here's this link, and thank you.
    #31585
    Well, Idon'tknow, now that you've mentioned it, it is that, I don't know how I can precisely answer this inquiry or question, other than I can suggest a goal for you personally. I think your goal could and would be to go for most guts in your lines of action. Would and could you please do this?

    The reason why is because, if 15 seconds is too fastest for you, than I must recommend between the time intervals of 30 seconds-10 minutes. But if you're really comfortable with 15 seconds, then I recommend you sketch out smartest but hardest and therefore fastest, by loosely but lightly drawing for 14-1 seconds. So for most details, may I suggest you look into the Proko Gesture Drawing videos rrrright here. This link leads you to tons of inspiration and influences for you to help you lift yourself up. If you may be thinking "I really don't want my figures and things too look like needle-and-haystacks!" I may remind you that your quick drawings are not meant to be the finished drawings, but for the free-est exercises. My hat's off to you.
    #31584
    Well, Idon'tknow, now that you've mentioned it, it is that, I don't know how I can precisely answer this inquiry or question, other than I can suggest a goal for you personally. I think your goal could and would be to go for most guts in your lines of action. Would and could you please do this?

    The reason why is because, if 15 seconds is too fastest for you, than I must recommend between the time intervals of 30 seconds-10 minutes. But if you're really comfortable with 15 seconds, then I recommend you sketch out smartest but hardest and therefore fastest, by loosely but lightly drawing for 14-1 seconds. So for most details, may I suggest you look into the Proko Gesture Drawing videos rrrright here. This link leads you to tons of inspiration and influences for you to help you lift yourself up. If you may be thinking "I really don't want my figures and things too look like needle-and-haystacks!" I may remind you that your quick drawings are not meant to be the finished drawings, but for the free-est exercises. My hat's off to you.
    #31548
    You know, JO NI, if I have a critique or nitpick I'd like to give you, it's these.

    I love the sense of flow, and I love the fluidity, but I also love the negative shapes, relationships and limited tones of the figures. Therefore, I'm not getting enough of your caricatured volumes, masses, and anatomies yet. Would you like to please loosen up your arms and shoulders with 10 minute studies of figures and anatomy parts in any human artistic anatomy book, as featured in our recommended books list?

    The reason is because your figure poses, bones, and muscles can, shall, must, and will become the least rigidest and least stilted and the most graceful, elegant, and fluidest. For most information, please look into some of the anatomy books on our list, such as the Sarah Simblet book, Anatomy for the Artist.

    Thank you, and let's hope you've found these things the most encouraging.
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    #31541
    Hello once again, Stvalentine14, and good evening to you. Well, after looking at your video once tonight here in Salem, MA, and I say that you're making the most fantastic march of progress I've ever seen from anyone and someone like you. I assume that you're still making your marches of progress, but I feel that the line confidence and silhouettes and negative spaces are all becoming most perfectly perceptible. And the relationships, are most likely flowing out of you like no other. Yet, there's still not enough of your lines of action and the most liveliest lines of rhythm in your edges yet. Would you please just go ahead with your first 1 hour class mode of figures for the next 7 days, all done from your arms, and all done with pencils and pens?

    The reason why is because, if your current goal is to make your drawings more fluid and liveliest instead of rigidest. For most details, please look into a copy of Ben Caldwell's Action Cartooning and Bridgman's Figure Drawing.

    Let's hope they've worked out for you most excellently.
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    #31539
    Good morning, Pastabrother, nicest job on your range of flow, fluidity, and constructions and tones of your heads and figures. I think you're getting to be on the rightest of tracks, but I feel that the animals, figures, and faces and expressions are not getting enough of that simplest and most cartoon-like quality in your angles and proportions of them. Would you care to please go ahead with 1 hour, 55 minutes of 5 minute poses of figures, faces, expresssions, animals and more cartoons? Thank you.

    The reason why is because, your edges, spaces, and relationships can and will become the most wildest, loosest, and liveliest in drawn appeal and fun to look at. So for most details and tricks and tips, kindle examine look into the Ivan Brunetti book on Cartooning on Amazon here.

    I hope you can and will find this completely and totally practical and useful.
    #31538
    You know, Stvalentine, I think that you can and will do you, but I really think your line confidence and quality and consistency in your figure drawings in this link. I feel that you can and will work with ink for your quick sketches, but I really feel that your graphite and graphite pencil drawings can and will be useful for the longest drawings, so how would you like to kindly go ahead with a video on how to sharpen your pencils for extra-long points.

    https://youtu.be/Srrs2maSW_w

    The explanation behind this video is because, though lots of ateliers thoughout history have benefited from this unique approach for pencil sharpening for life drawings, then you can and will benefit this approach. Don't worry. You maybe and might be able to get some paper bags or plastic bags to help you clean yourself up afterwards.

    Let's hope you can and shall find this generally concrete.
    #31529
    You know, Aunt, I like this video. This is the most greatest video you've ever shared with us ever.

    The reason why is not just because of the abstractions you've brought up, it's because of a thing called the shapes of the lights and shadows, but they must and can be universally applicable to any and every and some abstraction of the face and the expression. Especially, in the current context of facial recognition technology patterns. Would you like to please practice along to this video you've shared with me?

    The reason why is because if you can and will completely loosen yourself up with shadow and light shape patterns, then they must have the most interesting and most expressive quality to them.

    My hat's off to you!
    #31528
    You know, I, greatest job on your gesture drawing poses of your figures. I think you're doing the most terrific job on retaining the flow and fluidity in your lines of action and rhythm, but I feel that the sense of speed in your arms and hands are getting to be on the rightest track! I have to ask you a question, and that is, what is your current goal? Would you like to make your goal to be make your drawings the least rigidest but most flowing and liveliest, or improve your understanding of human anatomy in order to best draw imagined poses?

    The logic behind you picking out some specific goals for you is because, if you want to progress much greatest and therefore fastest, then you can and will have the strongest and sharpest idea on your improvement or two. So for most details and tips, may I suggest you a video on learning anything?

    https://youtu.be/5Ej7E1U8Vdw?feature=shared
    This one is from Jake Parker.

    Let's just take this with a biggest grain of salt.
    #31524
    Well, IJ99, by elasticity and plasticity, I mean how much change of shapes, lines, spaces, and forms you can and will get by way of something called squash-and-stretch, the two contrasts of vitality and energy, and life, but still retaining the original forces, shapes and forms.

    OK? Thanks.



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    #31523
    #31520
    Hello and welcome aboard, JO NI. Nicest but boldest but most powerful drawings in your forces in your poses and arms and legs anatomy, plus the torso forms and shapes. I love the strength, conviction, and clarity of the visual storytelling, lines, shapes, spaces, and forms. Very emotionally resonant and appealing indeed. But, I'm not getting enough of the most strongly organic forms yet. Would you care to just go ahead with just 4 10-minute figures, all done from your arms initially, while your wrists can and will be for the details.

    The most fastest you draw your figures and more, the least concerned you can be on the most smallest details. The one main reason: to help youself to get to be the best in drawing exercises for animation, art, comics, cartooning and others.

    And if you're really curious about most drawing tips and tricks, may I suggest you look into any of the Mattesi Force Drawing books on Amazon and Kindle?

    Good luck to you and your first goal.
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    #31519
    Hello, IJ99, and welcome to Line of Action. I'm Polyvios Animations and how are you? Say, you're doing the greatest job on preserving your flow, elasticity, and fluidity in your 30 minute class of figure drawings. I love your nudest 10 minute pose. I love your black Maped color pencil for your lines. But I'm not getting enough of the elasticity and plasticity of your human gestures and anatomy yet. How would you like to kindly go ahead with 40 minutes of 10 minute poses, all done from your dominant and non-dominant arms?

    The reason why is because, your lines can and will become the most expressive and exaggerated, and furthermore, the most loosest and most lightest in the touches. For most details, please look into any of the Force Drawing Video Livestreams on YouTube, for you to get some inspiration.

    Good luck to you and your march of progress.
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