I really like the middle three- those have the most dynamic positions and line quality. Plus, you did a good job foreshortening all those fingers.
It might be interesting to try a medium that relies less on line and more on shapes (i.e. painting, sculpture) so that you can mix it up a little more.
I do wish a couple of these were more tone based...definitely explore that more in the next assignment we have like this. The foreshortening on the colored pencil fingers is nice, I think the way the closest parts of the fingers are darkened helps with the illusion of depth. Varying the line width/darkness may be a technique you might want to play with in other drawings!
The technical stuff: Each week you are required to post your weekly sketchbook here--they should be uploaded before class each week. (remember, when you're scanning and posting to the blog, sketches should probably be 72 dpi and in Grayscale or RGB. Finals for printing should be scanned at 300 dpi.)
I encourage you to comment on each other's work and post any other projects or doodles you'd like to share or would like input on--this can include progress on class assignments, experiments, or links of interest you think the class would enjoy. This blog is to encourage you to help each other out, get ideas flowing, and see what everyone is up to! Have fun with it!
I'll be posting something myself each week, so stay tuned!
5 comments:
I really like the middle three- those have the most dynamic positions and line quality. Plus, you did a good job foreshortening all those fingers.
It might be interesting to try a medium that relies less on line and more on shapes (i.e. painting, sculpture) so that you can mix it up a little more.
Thanks. And yeah! Definitely. :]
the fingers are drawn very well! You generalized any vital crease in each hand very successfully.
I do wish a couple of these were more tone based...definitely explore that more in the next assignment we have like this. The foreshortening on the colored pencil fingers is nice, I think the way the closest parts of the fingers are darkened helps with the illusion of depth. Varying the line width/darkness may be a technique you might want to play with in other drawings!
The foreshortened colored pencil one is great. Impressive foreshortening. ^^
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