Hey artists, C. Spike Trotman, founder of Iron Circus Comics, just posted an invaluable thread on depicting different types of black hair. I’d do the thing where you screencap the whole thread and post it but it’s just too long (which is great because it’s a whole lot of useful information!) Give her a follow while you’re there.
Anyway, go check it out. I just wanted to save it and share it because I didn’t know how much I didn’t know!
Upon request someone asked for an anatomy tutorial! I kept it fairly general but if anyone wants something more specific, I’m happy to make a more of them :D
Hey! So I made these for friends but I also thought I would share them here! Please don’t remove my credits pls I don’t wanna have to watermark my work :(
Feel free to save. Please don’t respost, if you do ONLY on Instagram and credit me: jentaculargums
If you post it on Instagram you HAVE TO TAG ME and or put my name in the bio of the post. If you don’t I will report you and send my fucking goons to get that shit taken down, be respectful.
Enjoy! If this goes over well I’ll post some more like legs, arms, hands and feet ref sheet, perspective ect.
I don’t know why y’all ask me for tutorials, I think mine might be the least helpful in the world haha. TuT Mostly I just draw the thing people are asking about over and over again. But!!! @floriani1 and @governmenthookerleaderofamerica, I hope this helps with your nose-drawing woes.
I still struggle with facial feature diversity, including noses (namely at this point I want to give everybody big hooky noses because I LOVE them ahhh) so I feel u guys, fight the good fight.
Do you have a tipp how to draw mohawks?
KINDA SLOPPY but my general idea on how I draw mohawks
hairline first, stripe through the middle of the head, head fan for length and direction, add hair! hope this helps somewhat!!
By me, Sara D. (Heh.)
I think it’s very important for artists to vary the types of bodies they draw! Not only does it add visual interest and diversity, but different body types can enhance your characters! (Plus it’s more realistic; when was the last time you walked down the street and everyone had the same body type?) I know I have a hard time drawing different bodies, especially with men, so I’m making this tutorial to teach myself as well (I’ve heard the best way to cement learning something is to teach someone else).
So! Bodies! I’m going to use women for this tutorial because I feel they have more variety in their bodies. One of the most obvious ways bodies differ is in their amount of fat.
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On average, people store fat mostly in core areas like the bust, the waist, and the hips. It is important to remember that people gain and lose weight differently, and this is true no matter how fat or skinny one gets. However, these are common places people store fat:
The face and neck can be immediate indicators as to how much fat the rest of the body has; when someone loses or gains weight, it’s initially obvious in the face. This is possibly because the eye is (usually) drawn first to the face.
In addition to differences in the amount of body fat, bodies vary vastly in their proportions. The two main ways they differ is skeletally and in fat distribution. The hip to shoulder ratio is skeletal, and someone with wider shoulders might look more powerful or masculine, and someone with wider hips might look more grounded or feminine.
The torso to legs ratio is also a skeletal ratio. Someone with long legs in comparison with their torso might look taller than someone of the same height with a long torso, and they might also look skinnier.
(I say as I finally get some visual variety all up in here.)
Because the hips are also one of the places with the most weight gain in women, large hips can also be a matter of fat distribution. The three main places where the fat ratio really matters is in the bust, the waist and the hips (making up the core of the body).
While men usually carry weight in the belly area, the fat distribution can really vary with women. Some women carry more weight in the bust, some in the belly, and some in the hips/thighs. Some women carry more weight in two areas, like the bust and the hips, the bust and the belly, or the belly and the hips. Some women show no obvious bias to any area and carry weight equally.
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Taking into account skeletal ratios, fat distribution patterns, a vast human weight range, muscle tone and age, there are endless permutations of body types. It would be a shame if you used only one!
Oh, and that first image looks really interesting as a gif.
Really crappy/quick tutorial on how I draw muscles?
I tend to draw muscles very simply, and there are tons of other tutorials that are waaaaayyyy better! But I hope you enjoy yungterra!
The way you draw hair is so GORGEOUS!! It is okay to ask how you do it??
omg thank you :'D !! and ofc! here's how i like do it
whenever i draw hair i like to think about volume first and shape design second. usually when i make a sketch this is how i go about doing it:
^ i basically lay down quick shapes of what i want before going in with cleaner lines
first i choose a direction that the hair is supposed to swoop towards, then draw overlapping and twisting chunks/strands of hair (with varied size, thickness etc to make it look less stiff)
this applies to other types of hair as well :)
i guess to put it more plainly - i like to layer hair a little bit to make it look more visually interesting... but i do tend to go overboard sometimes, so i erase or start over a lot ^__^"
here's a recording i managed to take while sketching, hopefully it clears up what i've written so far LMAO
Source: The13thBlackCat