
If there is anything to complain about technique wise, it's the background lines are formed directly out of brush strokes, rather than there being strips of color that are abstractly conveyed with strokes that don't necessarily align to the subject. You never want that in tertiary subjects. Too many coincidences in a row and it stops reading like a big blanket of texture and more like a bunch of little details. People are good at picking up on patterns, and art weirdos are even better at it. Unless you specifically want that patterned feel to show up, you'll likely want to make sure none of your strokes end up forming a recognizable pattern, especially not in areas with high contrast. I'd maybe try to keep the strokes more abstract, as you have a few consistent waves of smoothly changing strokes going. At least not the precise thing your describing. It's a cheap trick and often times just shows a lack of diligence. Your brain is not used to seeing that and will tell you it looks alright. So they just make it some malformed vaguely human looking face. Many of them are incapable of creating believable human faces. That's why there are so many furry artists. We as humans are capable of interpreting the tiniest changes in facial structure, feature positions and expression. You'll be able to fall back on your ability to accurately copy what you see, whenever it's necessary though. Once you're able to create a pretty accurate replica of images you like, you can start to get a bit more loose and only try to capture the essence of the thing you study (without necessarily making a perfect copy - that's not necessary). It's about constantly measuring and comparing line angles, lengths, negative shapes, flows, etc. Learning to draw in proportions is the most basic and important skill to really master.


There's that one animator LOOMIS-san likes, he says exactly the same. If you learn anatomy, the gesture comes naturally. (I think than ebil Prokopenko also did that.) Yeah, I don't know why some people tell you to do gesture drawing early on in your development as an artist. Al Duca d Aosta, BARNEYS, BERGDORF GOODMAN, Bloomingdale, Bluefly, Christian Louboutin, FORWARD, Farfetch, Jimmy Choo, LUISAVIAROMA, Lane Crawford, MATCHESFASHION, Moda Operandi, Neiman Marcus, Net-A-Porter, Nordstrom, SSENSE,, Saks Fifth Avenue, Shopbop, TOM FORD,, ,, , A.F.VANDEVORST, ALAIA, ALEXANDER MCQUEEN, ALEXANDRE BIRMAN, ANN DEMEULEMEESTER, ANTHONY VACCARELLO, ANTONIO BERARDI, AQUAZZURA, BALENCIAGA, BALMAIN, BARBARA BUI, BOTTEGA VENETA, BRIAN ATWOOD, BURBERRY, CASADEI, CHARLOTTE OLYMPIA, CHLOE, CHRISTIAN LOUBOUTIN, CHRISTOPHER KANE, COURREGES, DOLCE & GABBANA, DSQUARED2, EMANUEL UNGARO, EMILIO PUCCI, ETRO, FAUSTO PUGLISI, FENDI, GARETH PUGH, GIAMBATTISTA VALLI, GIANVITO ROSSI, GIORGIO ARMANI, GIUSEPPE ZANOTTI, GIVENCHY, GOTHENBURG LONDON BOOTS, GUCCI, HAIDER ACKERMANN, ISABEL MARANT, J.W.>1032 >You have to know what you're looking at pretty well before you can hope to record it in under a minute. ModeSens, Shop Designer Bags and Shoes Provides most inclusive catalog of designer bags and shoes so you can shop smart and always get the best price on the best global looks tailored to you, all in one place.
