Thank you,
moredhel and
Songbird!
That got a chuckle out of me! I feel for you and sincerely hope there's substance to this course. :'D
Haha, yeah, it does remind me of all the stuff I learned from my previous years of studying art, so... it's not too bad.
I've got two requests if you guys don't mind.
Hands
I'd love to hear your methods to draw the bane of every artist, hands!
There's an excess of methods floating on the internet, it's hard to pick something that clicks. My current weird method is to start from an imprint of the hand: pads of palms, fingertips, knuckles & joints then connect. Fluid results and relatively comfy but the lower accuracy creates a mess when it comes to specific gestures. When they're tiny things seen from afar I start from silhouette instead and mostly suggest them, looks okay but looks okay.
Huh, let's see... for me every drawing starts from a light line that shows me the approximate position of the object I'm drawing, then I do the inside line/"the bones". I often start from the basis of the object, like draw everything on the outside and on the inside, that is especially true for the things like vases. A person I would start from very simplified bone structure, just to make sure that ribs and hips are in place and the backbone is going in the right direction and curving in the right places.
Same for hands.
1. Basic bone structure
2. Then basic shapes of the parts of the hand (to figure out the shapes of the palm)
3. Then get rid of some bone structure and start adding details and outlining the shapes more clearly
4. Then sometimes I would draw some sort of a line that would show the shape of the hand better, it helps if you need to draw a sleeve
5. And finally erase all the inner lines and draw a sleeve.
Edit: here’s a link to step-by-step drawing I made while writing this, making is a little more visualised:
https://1drv.ms/f/s!AsSnHPIBASO_x3RrNDwfe-NMmBxzI didn't go into shading, because... because that is way harder than just drawing the outline of the hand and there are so many little aspects that its hard to put it in words. Honestly, I don't always know them with my mind, my hand just figures where to put the correct shading instinctively. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't :'D
Sequential art
I got an idea. It's too late to fight it now, it buried itself too deep into my mind. I'm going to turn the prologue of something into a short comic. D:
This would be my first one. I have zero experience with sequential art. To study it I'm just going over the comics I like trying to take note of paneling, stylistic choices and pacing, but I basically have no idea what I'm doing. Pointers for structured ways to study it would be deeply appreciated!
With comics I'm not sure if I can give you a good advice... I've never done a full comic myself, the only thing I did was I started a little comic based on one of my stories, haven't finished it yet. Your idea with looking at people's work seems rather helpful. Good luck with that and I would love to see the outcome!
Edit: also, here are the first two pages of that little comic. I need to make the cover and probably start from the view of the place, because now I feel like it’s a little confusing... and it’s also in Russian, sorry... I’ll translate it one day...
https://1drv.ms/f/s!AsSnHPIBASO_yABwEhqA4T5dYOjTEnjoy the familiar style of doing hair
See? I have a tone to work on, so not a good teacher for now :'D)