Yeah, but if you draw like that, you know what you're going to end up with? ...A desk.FortheLegion said:It should be like assembling a desk.Snotnarok said:<- Artist.
It takes practice, just following a guide isn't going to get you results instantly. Drawing isn't assembling a desk there's more to it. Keep playing with it, keep a loose grip on your pencil and just make lighter looser shapes and then detail it up and eventually something will come out of it.
Back-Pocket Thesaurus?Icarion said:I cant draw shit but man can I come up with a grand oil painting in my head. here watch
Thats off the top of my head. Anyone got a good name for it?The ground is a barren, dusty plain that stretches to meet the horizon. The sky is black and speckled with stars and stretches to meet the ground. At the horizon the sun is barely cresting the world, shooting out great rays of light across the sky. Facing away from you is a figure out lined by the sun. His right hand is held aloft, in it a sword, with the sunlight glinting off its tip. cowering before him (seen around his outline) is a ragged figure, sitting with its head bowed.
heh, my biggest problem with bodies is all the joints. elbows, neck, knees, pelvis, ankles, wrists... unfortunately that's most of the body. All the advice I've received however is to practice drawing from the real thing - learning to draw from someone elses style will mess you up - which means if you've been heavily inspired by another persons drawing (like an anime) then you'll start imitating their style but without grasping the real thing, as it were. If you're interested in improving, then re-grounding yourself with those forms (bodies and stuff) as they appear in reality will be an important step in that process. Obviously once you've got that down then you can draw in whichever style you choose. I found one of the biggest parts in helping me to get ANY proficiency (and my proficiency is utterly minimal as I've not devoted the time to it) in drawing bits of the body I struggle with was to search for photographs of people, and then try and replicate it, paying very close attention to the bit I wanted to work on. I went from being totally unable to draw any sort of face to being able to sketch out a rough copy of soldiers from TF2 from my own mind.Okuu_Fusion said:I can draw okay apparently... but my biggest problems are being unable to transfer what I see in my head onto paper, my hands shaking too much, wanting perfection to the point where I ruin my pictures, and drawing bodies. I can draw shoulders on up, but below that is where I give up...
When I was younger I was, from what I'm told, great at drawing cartoon characters... I was even allowed to teach my class to draw popular characters from the time... But then I got into anime, and that severely screwed up my drawing style...
MasterOfWorlds said:A lot of people tell me it's unusual to be able to paint but not be able to draw. Being able to draw but not paint doesn't seem to be as unusual though.Asuka Soryu said:Wow. I can draw but I could never paint. xDMasterOfWorlds said:I can't draw, but I can paint. It's odd. I've actually had two paintings go to a "Spotlight on Youth" showing, and one of those went to a museum for a a few weeks. It was pretty cool.
Also, I like your avatar. Asuka was one of my favorite characters from NGE.
Me.spartan1077 said:Also, I can't not draw because I'm bad at drawing(Although that's maybe 780% of it) I can't draw because I'm;
A)Not creative enough(although I can write up kick-as* stories)
B)Can't see enough details in things
Anything I've "tried" creating in minecraft can tell you those two points above![]()
This.Andantil said:I can't draw at all. I can form grand detailed images in my mind, but my hands just can't translate it to paper. Also have horrible handwriting.
I've known a lot of people like that - feature of the community I circle within. Lots of people only just get their first taste of life at 50, or even later. It's important to recognise that life lasts a long, long time - and when it comes to acquiring skills, it's not just the years, but the hours. What it might take someone 15 years to become proficient in might take someone only a year or two because the latter person has made it their focus and invested a lot of time in quickly, whereas the other only has it as a passing interest. The focused person is also more likely to research and find optimised techniques and so on. Plus, the time spent learning is time well spent in and of itself. Though I'm quite young, I've had an interesting life so far, and I have a lot of things I would like to put to paper, and I've had the problem of not being able to manifest it also, the difference is, I write, I don't draw. It's estimated that it takes 10,000 hours to master something, but that's mastering something. You can make something that you're proud of, something that defines you, far earlier than that. I feel sorry that your home situation doesn't permit you that - hopefully there will be a way for you in the future to break away from that, and pursue your life down the avenue you desire. What I said was not meant to be demoralising - if anything, the opposite. The idea that proficiency is some ethereal thing you either have or don't is to me a far worse thought. One I'm finding to be less and less true the more I practice with my writing.Sir John the Net Knight said:What a depressing thought, especially considering my age. I know exactly what it feels like to have an image in your head and no way to get it out. I wish I had those skills, but my home life will not support artistic endeavors. I'm so depressed, by the time I'm allowed to start my life it will be almost over...