Posts tagged "anatomy"

artmonia:

Animatus – realistic skeletons of famous cartoon characters by Hyungkoo Lee

“Animatus“, an amazing series by Korean artist Hyungkoo Lee, who imagined what could look like the skeletons of cartoon famous characters. Skeletons are made of resin on an aluminum structure.

(via amuseoffirebane)

Sometimes I do studies so I can draw things that I still can’t draw better than I could. I should do it more.

About ½ mins each

capriciouscrow:
“  modmad:
“  Things I did not mean to do today;
• This.
”
Now see….Look at how cool this looks. How cartoony it is, obviously it isn’t realism but…i just. I’m so jelous that people can draw these sort of things…
I HAVE to draw...

capriciouscrow:

modmad:

Things I did not mean to do today;

  • This.

Now see….Look at how cool this looks. How cartoony it is, obviously it isn’t realism but…i just. I’m so jelous that people can draw these sort of things…

I HAVE to draw somewhat realistically. I know i’m far from being a great artist who can render a scene like a photo but i am even farther from being able to do this…I can NOT draw something so cartoony like this because it bothers me…

And on some level it’s cuz i don’t wanna hear a critique that says “Well that’s not anatomically correct” … Anyway i really love this drawing and the band is pretty cool too u-u

Not very often I reblog my own stuff, but I got curious at seeing someone state ‘obviously it isn’t realism’ and clicked the link to read this through.

First of all, thank you! It’s wonderful that you like my work so much! Very very flattered, kisses, high-fives and hugs, and damned straight the band is pretty cool too.

The real reason I’m dropping this back on my blog though, is that the only reason I can draw like this is because I have learned how to draw realistically. If I didn’t know how to draw an anatomically correct human, I wouldn’t be able to exaggerate and caricature it like this. People seem to mistake stylistic design, especially cartoon design, as a way of drawing without applying realism. It’s completely the opposite. If you want to draw like this, it is imperative that you know what you are pulling apart and stretching and squashing and generally turning on its head.

You hear the phrase 'you have to learn the rules to break them’, all the time, but it isn’t explained very often. What it means it that you have to know what the rule you are breaking is, and you have to have a reason for breaking it. In a cartoon it happens all the time: a person walks off a cliff and doesn’t fall until he notices; rule broken- gravity, reason- comedy. A smear frame will have the character drawn with ten hands and three eyes; rule broken- realism/on model design, reason- fluidity. With this style I seem to bend the legs and have that jutting out part just below the knee on the lower leg- this is actually just an exaggeration of the calf muscle, and when you look at a real human leg, the two parts do not line up exactly and are, in fact, curved. The bones are bent in order to absorb the shock of walking, have a look at some skeletons, you’ll see. I didn’t add anything or change anything, just pushed what was there already. Certainly, I did it so far that it looks absurd, but it is grounded in truth; rule broken- anatomy, reason- silhouette.

Basically what I’m saying is that when artists can draw like this 99% of the time it’s because they’ve spent long and arduous hours learning how to draw realistically. If you’re still having trouble believing me have a look at some of my earlier drawings of the robots, they aren’t at all cartoony. I’m not saying that I’m a master at drawing humans, I wish I was, but I don’t want to encourage the idea that I or any other cartoonist would reject a solid grounding in anatomy.

(via capriciouscrow-blog)

image

I would say I still pretty much suck at anatomy, but initially I learned by a) looking at other humans beings (generally advisable) and b) the medical journals in my house. My parents are doctors so I learned to draw hands and feet by looking at the bones. Once you know how something looks on the inside it’s infinitely easier to understand why it looks the way it does on the outside.

Of course, later on I took figure drawing classes and started to really look at how the proportions and muscles work. Figure drawing with a good, patient teacher is the absolute best way to learn how to draw humans.

I made a stream about other generalized anatomy tips over here but again, I am not an expert by any stretch. Best way to get a hang of it is practice practice practice. Not what you want to hear I’m sure, but it’s all you’ll ever hear when you ask, so better to put the hours in practicing than asking.