Help: Hands
- Tarotreader3
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Help: Hands
clearly, I suck at drawing hands (if you've seen my comic). I have two types, and while I think they look good, they need more variety... I've tried looking at my hand and drawing it, but it's not going so hot, same with simpsons hands... I'm just wondering if there's a "how to draw hands" guide out there. And not one from an anatomy book, but one more geared towards cartoonish looks.
- Driving Without Pants
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- Driving Without Pants
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- Tarotreader3
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- Steve Hogan
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This book is good:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/ ... 42-4850235
Also, this may sound like a weird recomendation, but Archie comics are good to look at. The artists had a great set of basic hand gestures that can be used in a variety of situations.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/ ... 42-4850235
Also, this may sound like a weird recomendation, but Archie comics are good to look at. The artists had a great set of basic hand gestures that can be used in a variety of situations.
This guys pretty good.
http://www.saveloomis.org/FigureDrawing/184.htm
I'd recommend flipping through the whole thing and you too can draw people for 1950's advertisements.
http://www.saveloomis.org/FigureDrawing/184.htm
I'd recommend flipping through the whole thing and you too can draw people for 1950's advertisements.
I remember caring... It was nice.
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In that case. I recommend the woolen mittens look. Extend the wrist up into the hand and round it. add a thinner elipse from the wrist up to about halfway up the hand type thing.
Seriously though, If you learn to draw actual hands It makes srawing fake hands that much easier.
Seriously though, If you learn to draw actual hands It makes srawing fake hands that much easier.
I remember caring... It was nice.
- McDuffies
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Like Rosenquist! Yeey!Smight wrote:This guys pretty good.
http://www.saveloomis.org/FigureDrawing/184.htm
I'd recommend flipping through the whole thing and you too can draw people for 1950's advertisements.
- Phalanx
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He's right. Cartoonisation (stylisation) is done taking the complex (realistic art) and simplifying it by taking out the unnessary details.Smight wrote:Seriously though, If you learn to draw actual hands It makes srawing fake hands that much easier.
You can jump straight into stylisation without any realistic art skills, but in nine cases out of ten the finished product will look off.
Basically, you can't draw a simplification of anything if you don't have a basic idea of how it looks and works in the original.
- Tarotreader3
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Wow, that never occured to me. Time to master realistic art skills.Phalanx wrote:He's right. Cartoonisation (stylisation) is done taking the complex (realistic art) and simplifying it by taking out the unnessary details.
You can jump straight into stylisation without any realistic art skills, but in nine cases out of ten the finished product will look off.
- Faub
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Mastering any skill is not a requirement for using it in your free time. If it were, I certainly wouldn't be doing anything but sitting in the corner drooling. I don't even have the English language down yet but I'm good enough with it for a passing conversation.
Knowing that the rules exist is probably good enough as long as you pay attention to those rules and give an attempt at following them. You will improve over time.
Knowing that the rules exist is probably good enough as long as you pay attention to those rules and give an attempt at following them. You will improve over time.
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Well, you know the old one... "man learns as long as he's alive...
Somewhere, in his home, Brian Bolland is probably mastering his realistic art skills too. But as long as you take mastering skills as fun, and not as a chore after which you'll be able to freely draw, you'll be allright.
To me, a big difference was when I took a real art anathomy book (not medicite anatomy) and spent several months in it's company. Really a great difference.
Somewhere, in his home, Brian Bolland is probably mastering his realistic art skills too. But as long as you take mastering skills as fun, and not as a chore after which you'll be able to freely draw, you'll be allright.
To me, a big difference was when I took a real art anathomy book (not medicite anatomy) and spent several months in it's company. Really a great difference.
*bwam*tarotreader3 wrote: ok you can shoot me now.
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Ian Moulding
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My roommate studied anatomy in his anthropology courses, learned combat medicine in the Canadian Militia, studied Chinese medicine and some-damn-form-or-another of Kung Fu, and has spent years doing physio to recover from a field injury. He looks at my art and says things like "The left rectus femoris is a bit off."
It's not very helpful.
On the other hand, all these tutorials and advice have been great. Thanks, y'all!
It's not very helpful.
On the other hand, all these tutorials and advice have been great. Thanks, y'all!
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Jen_Babcock
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