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how to draw whether they are "talented" or not.
drawing is a skill, just like reading or cooking or playing soccer. Sure, some people seem to be born being able to do these things, but the rest of us have to learn. Have you ever met someone who never learned how to read just because they had no talent for it? Of course not. that is because we are good at teaching people how to read. we are not so great at teaching people
how to draw, but it does not have to be that way. You can learn
how to draw just like you can learn to play soccer or drive a car. We'll break it down for you in step by step
drawing tutorials.
drawing lessons are super easy to do. they are a great place to start if you want to start
drawing right now.
Link:
how to draw a dragon NEW:
Link:
how to draw a wolf
Link:
Image: squirrel
Link:
how to draw a horse
Link:
how to draw an owl
Link:
how to draw a cat
Link:
how to draw a parrot
Link:
how to draw a butterfly
Link:
how to draw a pig
Link:
how to draw a penguin
Link:
how to draw a lion
Link:
how to draw a rabbit
Link:
Image: parrot
Link:
how to draw a seahorse
Link:
how to draw a tiger
Link:
how to draw a unicorn
Link:
how to draw a phoenix
Link:
how to draw a crocodile
Link:
how to draw a dinosaur
Link:
how to draw a giraffe
Link:
how to draw a snail
Link:
Image: cat
Link:
how to draw an elephant
Link:
how to draw a griffin
Link:
how to draw a poodle
Link:
how to draw a donkey
Link:
how to draw a porcupine
Link:
how to draw a kangaroo
Link: How to draw an octopus
Link: How to draw a turkey
Link:
Image: tiger
Link: How to draw a rose NEW:
Link: How to draw a betta fish
Link: How to draw
animals from pears
Link: How to draw
animals from alphabets
Link: How to draw a frog
Link: How to draw a bird
Link: How to draw a sheep
Link: How to draw a swan
Link: How to draw a peacock
Link: How to draw a cow
Link: How to draw a dachshund
Link: How to draw a kitten
Link:
Image: unicorn
Link: How to draw a monkey
Link: How to draw a deer
Link: How to draw a squirrel
Link: How to draw a whale
Link: How to draw a duck
Link: How to draw a koala
Link: How to draw an angelfish
Link: How to draw a walrus
Link: How to draw a cocker spaniel
Link: How to draw a chicken
Link: How to draw a rooster
Link: How to draw a bear
Link:
Image: pig
Link: How to draw a mouse
Link: How to draw a goat
Link: How to draw a camel
Link: How to draw a rhino
Link: How to draw a centaur
Link: How to draw a hippo
Link: How to draw a possum
Link: How to Draw People
drawing people is really difficult, once you know how to simplify the human form (both the body and the head), you will be able to make quick sketches of anyone easily.
drawing of people end up with the subject's hair looking like a messy knot of wire. The fundamental problem with
drawing hair is we get caught up in the old
drawing mistake of trying to include too much detail. And hair is REALLY detailed. that is why all those protrait
drawings look so weird - the artist has tried to draw every single hair on the person's head. Its kind of like if you tried to draw every single leaf on a tree - your tree would look really weird. So what is the solution? Well, like most things in
drawing, the solution is to simplify what you are
drawing. So instead of trying to draw every single hair, it is MUCH easier to "block out" the person's hair first.
Link:
Image: how to draw hair Step 1) You start with
drawing the hair at the same time that you are blocking out the rest of the head. This will solve a major problem that people run into when they are
drawing portraits - they add the hair last, only to realize that the shape of the hair does not fit with the shape of the rest of the head and face. And so suddenly they realize that not only has the hair not come out the way they wanted, but they can now see how they got, say, the shape of the subject's jaw completely wrong. They just never saw the mistake in their
drawing until they added the hair. You can avoid this by
drawing the hair at the same time as you draw the rest of the head. All the parts go together (duh), so draw them together! Besides, being able to use what you know about how the shape of the hair works with the shape of the head and the face will actually give you more information about how to do the
drawing. In other words, you will have more "data points" about how all the different shapes work together. Use that information - draw the hair at the same time you draw the rest of the head. Have I emphasized that enough? Step 2)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair After you have got the hair blocked out, take a closer look at what its doing. Which way is it going? Almost everyone's hair has certain sections that kind of work together as wholes. You need to see how those sections move and look, and then you will not get caught up in trying to draw individual hairs. (But, you will actually be able to add individual hairs here and there without messing up the overall look of the hair and the
drawing). As you see how the sections of hair lie on top of each other, also notice which parts have the most highlights and the most shadows. You can actually draw hair as a tonal
drawing - using nothing but highlights and shadows, and all good
drawings of hair get these shadows and highlights down perfectly. Spend at least a moment or two lightly blocking out where the highlights and shadows are. Step 3)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Now that you have done some pencil work to know how the sections of hair lie together, and where the highlights and dark parts of the hari are, you can often do a new
drawing and get the hair bascially right from the beginning. Here's why: take a close look at the "hair" in this study that is near the temple of the woman's head. Its actually not drawn in at all, but our eyes and brains know there is hair there, and that its the highlighted part. This is actually the secret to
drawing great-looking hair: What you leave out is often more important than what you actually draw in. Step 4)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Here's another study of the same head of hair. This one has a bit more detail drawn in. Notcie how the different sections of hair have different highlighting and shadow treatments? The section just over the ear has a dark accenuated spot that shows how that whole clump of hair moves over the ear. there is another dramatic difference in lights and darks on the left side of the head, right at the top center of the woman's temple. The highlighted hair is left completely black, and then there is a hard black line and a very dark section that goes behind her forehead. The difference between the two areas is so stark that the artist added in a bit of hair pattern right at her hairline. That particular pencil mark seems a little off to me, but it does show that if you are going to have a lightest of the light highlight in the hair, you need to surround it on all sides with at least some light tone. I do not mean to imply that any of this is easy. Some people's hair is really not that complicated to draw. Men's hair, for example, can often be pretty straightforward, mostly because it is so short.
Table:
Link:
Image: blocked out man
Link:
Image: a man But while men's hair may be easier to draw, it reveals another problem that is probably THE classic mistake of portrait drawing: Mismeasuring the proportions of the head. The first rule of drawing a person's head is that the eyes are right at the halfway point between the top and the bottom of the oval that creates the head shape. Because men's hair (and some womens' hair) is so short, it really shows off the shape of the head. If you have got that shape wrong, you will know by the time you try to draw the hair. There will be no fixing the problem by then - even if you draw "perfect" hair, it will be sitting on a malformed head. do not worry though, that is what erasers are for, and why there are so many new, blank pieces of paper in your sketchbook.
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Sometimes you have a portrait subject like the young lady to the right, who has beautiful, long, curling hair. Its gorgeous, but trying to draw it can be a little intimidating. This is a great example of how important hair can be to a portrait. To mess up the hair of this subject would be almost worse that putting her nose in just slightly the wrong spot. Drawing this head of hair was intimidating enough for the artist that they decided to do a study of it. This shows a different approach than the "blocking out" technique. Here the artist used a study of planes to show how the hair moved and is shaped, and how it caught the light. Notice how each plane has only one tone or shade to it - this helps the artist define and sort out the different lights and shadows. It is also an excellent way to recreate those three-dimensional shadows and highlights on two dimensional paper. Using planes like this is a classic approach to simplifying any drawing subject, so there is no reason it cannot be used on hair, too.
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Using planes like this is most often used to draw clothing and drapery. Drapery, especially, has many of the same challenges as drawing hair - lots of highlights and shadows, and much less form to work with than the bones and muscles of the subject's face and body. You can also use the "planes technique" to simplify drawing people's faces, or their bodies. Using planes to show different muscles groups is used a lot, especially in drawing comic book action heroes. You can still see the accentuated planes of their bodies even in the finished drawings.
Form on Website: www.aweber .com form/thankyou.html" id="redirect_3d0c8392458b4d85b
free drawing lesson every week. Email:
Link:
Image: how to draw cartoons
Link: How to Draw Cartoons If you are worried about not having enough artistic "talent", try some
free cartooning lessons. you will be drawing and laughing in no time flat.
Link:
Image: coloring pages
Link: Coloring Pages
free printable coloring pages for kids.
Link:
Image: magic tricks for kids
Link: Magic Tricks for Kids 50 tricks and that anyone can do. Puzzles and brain-teasers, too. Newest Blog Post:
Link: Overcoming perfectionism in drawing I was talking to some other people who draw last week (none of us really likes the term "artist") and we uncovered a funny secret stigma about erasers. A few of these folks thought that just having an eraser around when you were sketching meant you were not very good at it – because if you needed an eraser around then you must be making a lot of mistakes.
Link: www.HowToDrawIt .com |
Link: contact -- |
Link: about |
Link: privacy |
Link: how to draw blog |
Link: sitemap | © 2012 City Different Marketing LLC
Non-JavaScript contents:
Image: Clicky
Website
how to draw
Table:
Link:
Image:
how to draw
HTML comment: Place this tag where you want the +1 button to render
HTML comment: Place this tag after the last plusone tag
Link: Tweet
Link:
Image: Follow howtodrawit on Twitter
Form on Website:
Table:
Link: Bookmark this site
HTML comment: BEGIN COMPACT POLL CODE
Frame on Website
HTML comment: END COMPACT POLL CODE Did you choose "Other"? I would love to know what your other is.
Link: Email me to let me know.
HTML comment: - ANIMAL LIST AND AMAZON LINKS
Table:
how to draw whether they are "talented" or not.
drawing is a skill, just like reading or cooking or playing soccer. Sure, some people seem to be born being able to do these things, but the rest of us have to learn. Have you ever met someone who never learned
how to read just because they had no talent for it? Of course not. that is because we are good at teaching people
how to read. we are not so great at teaching people
how to draw, but it does not have to be that way. You can learn
how to draw just like you can learn to play soccer or drive a car. We'll break it down for you in step by step
drawing tutorials.
drawing lessons are super easy to do. they are a great place to start if you want to start
drawing right now.
Link:
how to draw a dragon NEW:
Link:
how to draw a wolf
Link:
Image: squirrel
Link:
how to draw a horse
Link:
how to draw an owl
Link:
how to draw a cat
Link:
how to draw a parrot
Link:
how to draw a butterfly
Link:
how to draw a pig
Link:
how to draw a penguin
Link:
how to draw a lion
Link:
how to draw a rabbit
Link:
Image: parrot
Link:
how to draw a seahorse
Link:
how to draw a tiger
Link:
how to draw a unicorn
Link:
how to draw a phoenix
Link:
how to draw a crocodile
Link:
how to draw a dinosaur
Link:
how to draw a giraffe
Link:
how to draw a snail
Link:
Image: cat
Link:
how to draw an elephant
Link:
how to draw a griffin
Link:
how to draw a poodle
Link:
how to draw a donkey
Link:
how to draw a porcupine
Link:
how to draw a kangaroo
Link:
how to draw an octopus
Link:
how to draw a turkey
Link:
Image: tiger
Link:
how to draw a rose NEW:
Link:
how to draw a betta fish
Link:
how to draw
animals from pears
Link:
how to draw
animals from alphabets
Link:
how to draw a frog
Link:
how to draw a bird
Link:
how to draw a sheep
Link:
how to draw a swan
Link:
how to draw a peacock
Link:
how to draw a cow
Link:
how to draw a dachshund
Link:
how to draw a kitten
Link:
Image: unicorn
Link:
how to draw a monkey
Link:
how to draw a deer
Link:
how to draw a squirrel
Link:
how to draw a whale
Link:
how to draw a duck
Link:
how to draw a koala
Link:
how to draw an angelfish
Link:
how to draw a walrus
Link:
how to draw a cocker spaniel
Link:
how to draw a chicken
Link:
how to draw a rooster
Link:
how to draw a bear
Link:
Image: pig
Link:
how to draw a mouse
Link:
how to draw a goat
Link: How to draw a camel
Link: How to draw a rhino
Link: How to draw a centaur
Link: How to draw a hippo
Link: How to draw a possum
Link: How to Draw People
drawing people is really difficult, once you know how to simplify the human form (both the body and the head), you will be able to make quick sketches of anyone easily.
drawing of people end up with the subject's hair looking like a messy knot of wire. The fundamental problem with
drawing hair is we get caught up in the old
drawing mistake of trying to include too much detail. And hair is REALLY detailed. that is why all those protrait
drawings look so weird - the artist has tried to draw every single hair on the person's head. Its kind of like if you tried to draw every single leaf on a tree - your tree would look really weird. So what is the solution? Well, like most things in
drawing, the solution is to simplify what you are
drawing. So instead of trying to draw every single hair, it is MUCH easier to "block out" the person's hair first.
Link:
Image: how to draw hair Step 1) You start with
drawing the hair at the same time that you are blocking out the rest of the head. This will solve a major problem that people run into when they are
drawing portraits - they add the hair last, only to realize that the shape of the hair does not fit with the shape of the rest of the head and face. And so suddenly they realize that not only has the hair not come out the way they wanted, but they can now see how they got, say, the shape of the subject's jaw completely wrong. They just never saw the mistake in their
drawing until they added the hair. You can avoid this by
drawing the hair at the same time as you draw the rest of the head. All the parts go together (duh), so draw them together! Besides, being able to use what you know about how the shape of the hair works with the shape of the head and the face will actually give you more information about how to do the
drawing. In other words, you will have more "data points" about how all the different shapes work together. Use that information - draw the hair at the same time you draw the rest of the head. Have I emphasized that enough? Step 2)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair After you have got the hair blocked out, take a closer look at what its doing. Which way is it going? Almost everyone's hair has certain sections that kind of work together as wholes. You need to see how those sections move and look, and then you will not get caught up in trying to draw individual hairs. (But, you will actually be able to add individual hairs here and there without messing up the overall look of the hair and the
drawing). As you see how the sections of hair lie on top of each other, also notice which parts have the most highlights and the most shadows. You can actually draw hair as a tonal
drawing - using nothing but highlights and shadows, and all good
drawings of hair get these shadows and highlights down perfectly. Spend at least a moment or two lightly blocking out where the highlights and shadows are. Step 3)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Now that you have done some pencil work to know how the sections of hair lie together, and where the highlights and dark parts of the hari are, you can often do a new
drawing and get the hair bascially right from the beginning. Here's why: take a close look at the "hair" in this study that is near the temple of the woman's head. Its actually not drawn in at all, but our eyes and brains know there is hair there, and that its the highlighted part. This is actually the secret to
drawing great-looking hair: What you leave out is often more important than what you actually draw in. Step 4)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Here's another study of the same head of hair. This one has a bit more detail drawn in. Notcie how the different sections of hair have different highlighting and shadow treatments? The section just over the ear has a dark accenuated spot that shows how that whole clump of hair moves over the ear. there is another dramatic difference in lights and darks on the left side of the head, right at the top center of the woman's temple. The highlighted hair is left completely black, and then there is a hard black line and a very dark section that goes behind her forehead. The difference between the two areas is so stark that the artist added in a bit of hair pattern right at her hairline. That particular pencil mark seems a little off to me, but it does show that if you are going to have a lightest of the light highlight in the hair, you need to surround it on all sides with at least some light tone. I do not mean to imply that any of this is easy. Some people's hair is really not that complicated to draw. Men's hair, for example, can often be pretty straightforward, mostly because it is so short.
Table:
Link:
Image: blocked out man
Link:
Image: a man But while men's hair may be easier to draw, it reveals another problem that is probably THE classic mistake of portrait
drawing: Mismeasuring the proportions of the head. The first rule of
drawing a person's head is that the eyes are right at the halfway point between the top and the bottom of the oval that creates the head shape. Because men's hair (and some womens' hair) is so short, it really shows off the shape of the head. If you have got that shape wrong, you will know by the time you try to draw the hair. There will be no fixing the problem by then - even if you draw "perfect" hair, it will be sitting on a malformed head. do not worry though, that is what erasers are for, and why there are so many new, blank pieces of paper in your sketchbook.
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Sometimes you have a portrait subject like the young lady to the right, who has beautiful, long, curling hair. Its gorgeous, but trying to draw it can be a little intimidating. This is a great example of how important hair can be to a portrait. To mess up the hair of this subject would be almost worse that putting her nose in just slightly the wrong spot.
drawing this head of hair was intimidating enough for the artist that they decided to do a study of it. This shows a different approach than the "blocking out" technique. Here the artist used a study of planes to show how the hair moved and is shaped, and how it caught the light. Notice how each plane has only one tone or shade to it - this helps the artist define and sort out the different lights and shadows. It is also an excellent way to recreate those three-dimensional shadows and highlights on two dimensional paper. Using planes like this is a classic approach to simplifying any
drawing subject, so there is no reason it cannot be used on hair, too.
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Using planes like this is most often used to draw clothing and drapery. Drapery, especially, has many of the same challenges as
drawing hair - lots of highlights and shadows, and much less form to work with than the bones and muscles of the subject's face and body. You can also use the "planes technique" to simplify
drawing people's faces, or their bodies. Using planes to show different muscles groups is used a lot, especially in
drawing comic book action heroes. You can still see the accentuated planes of their bodies even in the finished
drawings.
Form on Website: www.aweber .com form/thankyou.html" id="redirect_3d0c8392458b4d85b
free
drawing lesson every week. Email:
Link:
Image: how to draw cartoons
Link: How to Draw Cartoons If you are worried about not having enough artistic "talent", try some
free cartooning lessons. you will be drawing and laughing in no time flat.
Link:
Image: coloring pages
Link: Coloring Pages
free printable coloring pages for kids.
Link:
Image: magic tricks for kids
Link: Magic Tricks for Kids 50 tricks and that anyone can do. Puzzles and brain-teasers, too. Newest Blog Post:
Link: Overcoming perfectionism in drawing I was talking to some other people who draw last week (none of us really likes the term "artist") and we uncovered a funny secret stigma about erasers. A few of these folks thought that just having an eraser around when you were sketching meant you were not very good at it – because if you needed an eraser around then you must be making a lot of mistakes.
Link: www.HowToDrawIt .com |
Link: contact -- |
Link: about |
Link: privacy |
Link: how to draw blog |
Link: sitemap | © 2012 City Different Marketing LLC
Non-JavaScript contents:
Image: Clicky
Website
how to draw
Table:
Link:
Image:
how to draw
HTML comment: Place this tag where you want the +1 button to render
HTML comment: Place this tag after the last plusone tag
Link: Tweet
Link:
Image: Follow howtodrawit on Twitter
Form on Website:
Table:
Link: Bookmark this site
HTML comment: BEGIN COMPACT POLL CODE
Frame on Website
HTML comment: END COMPACT POLL CODE Did you choose "Other"? I would love to know what your other is.
Link: Email me to let me know.
HTML comment: - ANIMAL LIST AND AMAZON LINKS
Table:
how to draw whether they are "talented" or not.
drawing is a skill, just like reading or cooking or playing soccer. Sure, some people seem to be born being able to do these things, but the rest of us have to learn. Have you ever met someone who never learned
how to read just because they had no talent for it? Of course not. that is because we are good at teaching people
how to read. we are not so great at teaching people
how to draw, but it does not have to be that way. You can learn
how to draw just like you can learn to play soccer or drive a car. We'll break it down for you in step by step
drawing tutorials.
drawing lessons are super easy to do. they are a great place to start if you want to start
drawing right now.
Link:
how to draw a dragon NEW:
Link:
how to draw a wolf
Link:
Image: squirrel
Link:
how to draw a horse
Link:
how to draw an owl
Link:
how to draw a cat
Link:
how to draw a parrot
Link:
how to draw a butterfly
Link:
how to draw a pig
Link:
how to draw a penguin
Link:
how to draw a lion
Link:
how to draw a rabbit
Link:
Image: parrot
Link:
how to draw a seahorse
Link:
how to draw a tiger
Link:
how to draw a unicorn
Link:
how to draw a phoenix
Link:
how to draw a crocodile
Link:
how to draw a dinosaur
Link:
how to draw a giraffe
Link:
how to draw a snail
Link:
Image: cat
Link:
how to draw an elephant
Link:
how to draw a griffin
Link:
how to draw a poodle
Link:
how to draw a donkey
Link:
how to draw a porcupine
Link:
how to draw a kangaroo
Link:
how to draw an octopus
Link:
how to draw a turkey
Link:
Image: tiger
Link:
how to draw a rose NEW:
Link:
how to draw a betta fish
Link:
how to draw
animals from pears
Link:
how to draw
animals from alphabets
Link:
how to draw a frog
Link:
how to draw a bird
Link:
how to draw a sheep
Link:
how to draw a swan
Link:
how to draw a peacock
Link:
how to draw a cow
Link:
how to draw a dachshund
Link:
how to draw a kitten
Link:
Image: unicorn
Link:
how to draw a monkey
Link:
how to draw a deer
Link:
how to draw a squirrel
Link:
how to draw a whale
Link:
how to draw a duck
Link:
how to draw a koala
Link:
how to draw an angelfish
Link:
how to draw a walrus
Link:
how to draw a cocker spaniel
Link:
how to draw a chicken
Link:
how to draw a rooster
Link:
how to draw a bear
Link:
Image: pig
Link:
how to draw a mouse
Link:
how to draw a goat
Link: How to draw a camel
Link: How to draw a rhino
Link: How to draw a centaur
Link: How to draw a hippo
Link: How to draw a possum
Link: How to Draw People
drawing people is really difficult, once you know how to simplify the human form (both the body and the head), you will be able to make quick sketches of anyone easily.
drawing of people end up with the subject's hair looking like a messy knot of wire. The fundamental problem with
drawing hair is we get caught up in the old
drawing mistake of trying to include too much detail. And hair is REALLY detailed. that is why all those protrait
drawings look so weird - the artist has tried to draw every single hair on the person's head. Its kind of like if you tried to draw every single leaf on a tree - your tree would look really weird. So what is the solution? Well, like most things in
drawing, the solution is to simplify what you are
drawing. So instead of trying to draw every single hair, it is MUCH easier to "block out" the person's hair first.
Link:
Image: how to draw hair Step 1) You start with
drawing the hair at the same time that you are blocking out the rest of the head. This will solve a major problem that people run into when they are
drawing portraits - they add the hair last, only to realize that the shape of the hair does not fit with the shape of the rest of the head and face. And so suddenly they realize that not only has the hair not come out the way they wanted, but they can now see how they got, say, the shape of the subject's jaw completely wrong. They just never saw the mistake in their
drawing until they added the hair. You can avoid this by
drawing the hair at the same time as you draw the rest of the head. All the parts go together (duh), so draw them together! Besides, being able to use what you know about how the shape of the hair works with the shape of the head and the face will actually give you more information about how to do the
drawing. In other words, you will have more "data points" about how all the different shapes work together. Use that information - draw the hair at the same time you draw the rest of the head. Have I emphasized that enough? Step 2)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair After you have got the hair blocked out, take a closer look at what its doing. Which way is it going? Almost everyone's hair has certain sections that kind of work together as wholes. You need to see how those sections move and look, and then you will not get caught up in trying to draw individual hairs. (But, you will actually be able to add individual hairs here and there without messing up the overall look of the hair and the
drawing). As you see how the sections of hair lie on top of each other, also notice which parts have the most highlights and the most shadows. You can actually draw hair as a tonal
drawing - using nothing but highlights and shadows, and all good
drawings of hair get these shadows and highlights down perfectly. Spend at least a moment or two lightly blocking out where the highlights and shadows are. Step 3)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Now that you have done some pencil work to know how the sections of hair lie together, and where the highlights and dark parts of the hari are, you can often do a new
drawing and get the hair bascially right from the beginning. Here's why: take a close look at the "hair" in this study that is near the temple of the woman's head. Its actually not drawn in at all, but our eyes and brains know there is hair there, and that its the highlighted part. This is actually the secret to
drawing great-looking hair: What you leave out is often more important than what you actually draw in. Step 4)
Link:
Image: another way to draw hair Here's another study of the same head of hair. This one has a bit more detail drawn in. Notcie how the different sections of hair have different highlighting and shadow treatments? The section just over the ear has a dark accenuated spot that shows how that whole clump of hair moves over the ear. there is another dramatic difference in lights and darks on the left side of the head, right at the top center of the woman's temple. The highlighted hair is left completely black, and then there is a hard black line and a very dark section that goes behind her forehead. The difference between the two areas is so stark that the artist added in a bit of hair pattern right at her hairline. That particular pencil mark seems a little off to me, but it does show that if you are going to have a lightest of the light highlight in the hair, you need to surround it on all sides with at least some light tone. I do not mean to imply that any of this is easy. Some people's hair is really not that complicated to draw. Men's hair, for example, can often be pretty straightforward, mostly because it is so short.
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Image: a man But while men's hair may be easier to draw, it reveals another problem that is probably THE classic mistake of portrait drawing: Mismeasuring the proportions of the head. The first rule of drawing a person's head is that the eyes are right at the halfway point between the top and the bottom of the oval that creates the head shape. Because men's hair (and some womens' hair) is so short, it really shows off the shape of the head. If you have got that shape wrong, you will know by the time you try to draw the hair. There will be no fixing the problem by then - even if you draw "perfect" hair, it will be sitting on a malformed head. do not worry though, that is what erasers are for, and why there are so many new, blank pieces of paper in your sketchbook.
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Image: another way to draw hair Sometimes you have a portrait subject like the young lady to the right, who has beautiful, long, curling hair. Its gorgeous, but trying to draw it can be a little intimidating. This is a great example of how important hair can be to a portrait. To mess up the hair of this subject would be almost worse that putting her nose in just slightly the wrong spot. Drawing this head of hair was intimidating enough for the artist that they decided to do a study of it. This shows a different approach than the "blocking out" technique. Here the artist used a study of planes to show how the hair moved and is shaped, and how it caught the light. Notice how each plane has only one tone or shade to it - this helps the artist define and sort out the different lights and shadows. It is also an excellent way to recreate those three-dimensional shadows and highlights on two dimensional paper. Using planes like this is a classic approach to simplifying any drawing subject, so there is no reason it cannot be used on hair, too.
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Image: another way to draw hair Using planes like this is most often used to draw clothing and drapery. Drapery, especially, has many of the same challenges as drawing hair - lots of highlights and shadows, and much less form to work with than the bones and muscles of the subject's face and body. You can also use the "planes technique" to simplify drawing people's faces, or their bodies. Using planes to show different muscles groups is used a lot, especially in drawing comic book action heroes. You can still see the accentuated planes of their bodies even in the finished drawings.
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Link: How to Draw Cartoons If you are worried about not having enough artistic "talent", try some free cartooning lessons. you will be drawing and laughing in no time flat.
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Link: Overcoming perfectionism in drawing I was talking to some other people who draw last week (none of us really likes the term "artist") and we uncovered a funny secret stigma about erasers. A few of these folks thought that just having an eraser around when you were sketching meant you were not very good at it – because if you needed an eraser around then you must be making a lot of mistakes.
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