Pansexual | Person | ♊ | 1996 | ESP
● Little "art blog" full of references and inspiration for myself ●

benjaminwarnitz:

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An animation for @loudhelens , who”s working hard for her future exam. You’re next !

(sorry for the bad quality gif, this anim is a bit long so I did my best :/ )

Drawing the Body (It’s all in the proportions!)

kaleidoscopetrigger:

markpenmanfutureworks:

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Good stuff from Mark here.

bluekomadori:

The tutorial of how I achieve watercolor effect in Sai! :) I highly recommend using real watercolor paintings (your own or ones found on the internet) as reference.

And here you can find a few useful links: 

  1. You can download the Sai file of this picture here: link 
  2. Video process of painting another picture: link
  3. The old watercolor tutorial: link
  4. Sai brushes (none of them is made by me) link + file you need to open them in Sai: link
  5. Awesome watercolor brushes made by Kyle T Webster: link

Here’s the finished painting: link

do you ever just

drawingmodel:

sushibuns:

yokoboo:

maggotmagnet:

squigglydigg:

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“no that’s not dramatic and cheesy enough”

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“getting warmer”

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“t HERE IT IS”

i love this but i dont know how to do this

hoW

For those wondering about HOW to do this, here’s a short explanation according to me:

Drawing A to Drawing B:
-the most obvious change is the exaggeration of the line of motion in the character.  

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In Drawing B the line of motion is much more pronounced, creating more drama and movement to the whole composition

-The arms are open wider, showing more confidence and exuberance in the character, exaggerating their emotions so they can be more clearly read without having to look to the face for emotional cues.

-the legs are wider apart, adding to the aforementioned confidence but also giving the character a solid foundation, visually speaking.

-The head is tilted back and overlapped by the chest, adding a touch of dynamic perspective to the drawing.

Drawing B to Drawing C: 
-Most obvious change is to zoom in on the character.  Character framing is just as important as what the character is doing.  Zooming in can help infensify emotions.  this shot is ALL about this character and what they’re feeling.
-Because of the zooming in, the arms/hands would have gotten lost, so instead of making the canvas wider, the artist has elected to rotate the character slightly, bringing a dynamic angle to things and more intensity to the close shot.
-While the character is more upright in this shot compared to Drawing B, in Drawing C the chest still slightly overlaps the neck, preserving the feeling of being slightly below the character (putting them in a position of power relative to the viewer), which helps maintain confidence and power in the character.
-the chest is exaggerated to carry the majority of the body’s line of action so even though you cannot see the legs, our brains are able to fill in the gap and envision that line of action.
-The cropping/framing of the character allows for a more interesting composition/negative shapes created by the positive (character) on the negative (background), creating more visual interest as well as a circular motion to the composition through the arms, across the face to the negative space for the eyes to rest in before dropping to the hand in the background and back through the composition again.

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Pretty sure I’ve posted this before. But worth a repost

ca-tsuka:

Preview of “BoJack Horseman: The Art Before the Horse” artbook.
Available this tuesday (September 4th).
Amazon >> USA / Canada / UK / France / Japan

tb-sj:

TBchoi!!! Drawing tips  LIVE STREAM ON TWITCH
https://www.twitch.tv/tbchoi

tenoni-references:

Library books art hack by @danarune on Twitter

codes by
pohroro