How to paint Thor How to draw and paint Thor. This tutorial, you will learn to paint Thor, a character from the Avengers, from digital painting video with in depth instruction along with step by step images lesson. It’s been quite a little while since my last update. Marvel Studios 公司扩展了一个新的超级英雄类型:清华水池的电影世界。 Thor painting The final painting took me about two sitting sessions then to complete or hopefully. A bit about Thor and its origin: Thor is a fictional superhero who appears in publications published by Marvel Comics. Watch is a video tutorial demo how to draw and paint Thor. Marvel Studios expands its film universe with a new type of superhero: THOR. As for Thor character in latest film: Chris Hemsworth as Thor: The god of thunder based on the deity of the same name from Norse mythology. Below are step by step images how to draw and paint Thor. How to draw Thor More painting steps how to paint Thor
Citizen Art - Buy Original Poster Art Prints from Unique Artists How to draw a portrait from different angles | Illustration This is certainly a tricky skill to master, but it gets easier with time and practice. The key is to understand the proportions and how the volume and placement of a feature is depicted from various angles. A sharp, chiselled nose is certainly easier to depict in a side view. But knowing how to depict that same nose with the same proportions in the front view is the key to getting this right. Face facts The easiest way to start practising is to use guidelines and draw your character orthographically (front, side, top). Another vitally important way to practise is to draw real people from life, at various angles. Side profile Draw your character from the front or side to start, but try both for various characters. Keep it simple On a separate layer, draw light guidelines across the page to the right or the left in order to draw the side view. Once you have your side view, move it up the canvas and rotate it about 45 degrees to use it to draw an angled top view. Finished piece Artist's secret
Tutorial Tuesday: Foreshortening Tricks Hi folks! Tutorial Tuesday is going to be a basic one – I’m a bit under the weather currently so this may not be the best post, but I want to give you something that I feel is important in the world of drawing – some pointers on foreshortening. Check this out. Foreshortening is basically an optical illusion created from a compressed looking drawing in perspective. This perspective is distorted in order to create a false sense of depth, and is used a lot in comics – Superman flying with his outstretched arm coming out of the page, or a fist connecting with a villain’s face, etc. There’s several ways artists choose to render their drawings using foreshortening. Receding Plane Technique Scruffy Ronin uses a method that relies on a drawing a flat plane that recedes into space as a boundary. Five Points in Foreshortening Here’s another basic set of rules you should follow when working with foreshortening. Size, Overlapping Shapes, and Surfaces Blocks and Circles See you next week.
2008: Home Drawing the Human Body in Perspective: Video Series Figure drawing techniques can help you create realistic images of people in your art work. Learn how to draw different parts of the human face and body with help from a professional artist and art instructor in this free video series on figure drawing techniques. Figure Drawing in Perspective When drawing the human form in perspective, it's helpful to use a mannequin. Determine the top and the bottom of your figure relative to what you are drawing with help from a professional artist and art instructor in this free video on figure drawing techniques. How to Draw Oval Faces To draw oval faces, first determine where the top, bottom and sides of the face need to be. Using a Grid for Drawing Faces To use a grid to draw a human face, first divide the face in half with a line both ways. Tips for Drawing Faces When drawing faces, it is important to place them correctly on the head. How to Draw Eyes How to Draw a Mouth How to Draw a Nose How to Draw Hands How to Draw a Human Body How to Draw Clothes
today in art » 8 Drawing Exercises That Every Artist Should Practice Wire Drawing Exercise Example from save-janos.net – this example has been placed on a painted acrylic background With this exercise you are not going to be drawing at all. All you need is some wire and a pair of pliers with cutters. My favorite wire for this exercise is tie wire and you can get it almost any hardware store. Non-dominant Hand Give your non-dominant hand a chance to shine. Draw Vertically you should be doing most of these drawing exercises vertically if you have an easel or drawing horse. Continuous Contour Line Drawing Examples from Draw and Paint Online A Continuous Contour Line Drawing is an exercise to help us focus on the line. Continuous Blind Contour Line Drawing Example from Anne Leuck Feldhaus If you enjoy the contour line exercise, then you should certainly try this one. Gesture Drawing Draw the Negative Space Example from NBCC.ca In this exercise you will be drawing the space around the object, negative space, rather than the object itself. Value Drawing Exercise
3x3 Magazine How To Draw Hands Tutorials So everybody knows that the hands and the fingers are one of the hardest things to draw. So here is a personal collection of different hand references, hope to enjoy it and never stop practice. Hogarth hand poses from Iron Giant (middle of page) Mickey Mouse Hand Model Sheet by Les Clark ca. 1932 Merlin hand poses via Deja View Hand drawing tut by uchuucacahuate on deviantart. Excellent hand tutorial by alexds1 on deviantart.com Mr. Useful collection of hand poses by Chrissy Fellmeth Collection of female hand poses by artrush73′s Study of the hand in minimal style
Proko - How to Draw, Draw Step by Step, Draw People, Draw Face, How to Paint, Learn to Draw, Drawing Tutorials, Figure Drawing HydroSeventyFour™ | The rebirth of Digital Tyranny Birch Trees Watercolor Lesson Everyone has done a birch tree art lesson. They are such a lovely tree, stripped of their leaves and shimmering with black and white bark. Most kids in Southern California have never seen a forest of birch trees, unlike my 10-year old self who collected the bark to someday build my own birch-bark canoe like the Mi’kmaqs had done. But this lesson is not just about birch trees. It is also a lesson in color and in particular, winter color. Again, this is a bit foreign to my students who live in a perpetually sunny, color-filled world, but it’s an important concept. This is not a lesson that originated from me. Supplies: 9″ x 12″ watercolor paper (school grade “Biggie” Brand or Canson), watercolor palette including white (if you don’t have white watercolor/gouache use tempera paint), masking tape, salt, small and medium size watercolor brush. Apply Masking Tape Tear strips of masking tape in half lengthwise (not easy) and use ripped or torn edge for the outside of tree. Painting the Sky
Fuck Yeah Art Tips! Thursday, November 20, 2014Saturday, October 18, 2014Wednesday, July 30, 2014 Concise overview on how light behaves on different forms Thursday, May 29, 2014 Tuesday, May 20, 2014 eyecager: Shape is one of those words that sound really weird when you say it over and over again.Welcome to your new curse. Wednesday, March 26, 2014Tuesday, February 18, 2014 Anonymous asked: This is not very important, so you could probably skip this, but I want to tell you right now that you are a mentor I would be lost without. Ahh, this just cheered me up so much!! ALSO!! #ask tobediff: More of the same!