Monday, May 18, 2009
Talks about sketching animals
Do you like this story?
Above about sketching animals.
Sketching animals is easy when you think in terms of shapes rather than the animals themselves. By studying shapes, you can learn to sketch the body using peanut shapes, elipses, boxes, cones, circles, squares and rectangles. Using these shapes, you will form animals with ease and be able to build detail onto the foundation shape to draw a realistic animal.
- Everything around us has a shape or form. Whether it is linear or not, the form tells our eyes what we are seeing. So if you use forms to build upon, you can shape the animals you want to draw For instance, a goose is comprised of an oval body, a cone- like cylindrical neck, cone shapes for legs and a cone for a beak. The tail is an elongated triangle.
- Different types of shapes form most animals before you begin to add details. Try drawing some shapes as practice before associating them with any specific animal. The peanut shape can be used for a variety of animal heads. Moose, giraffes, hippos, horses and deer heads use a peanut shape. Cows are shaped with peanut bodies, an oval face and cylindrical cup nose. The legs are long cylinders with disc-shaped cups for feet. A lion head starts with a circle and a short cylinder for the nose, and rounded domes for ears.
- The benefit of using shapes to draw with is the ease in which you will be able to complete the rendering. Once the shapes are in place, it is easy to change and add to or delete from the original form. It also makes quick sketching easier. Shapes will also give you a sense of motion that is part of the perspective process.
Significance
Types
Benefits
This post was written by: beemagnet77
BeeMagnet is a professional graphic designer, web designer and business man with really strong passion that specializes in marketing strategy. Usually hangs out in Twitter has recently launched a blog dedicated to home design inspiration for designers, bride, photographers and artists called HomeBase
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 Responses to “Talks about sketching animals”
Post a Comment