These are all good considerations. I would like to add that starting to make your marks from the center of the head and working out to the edges verses the other way around seems to be a good practice that many are following.
This was excellent! I am going to print it out and bring copies to the Life Class I teach. I would add just one more tip for life drawing: capture the gesture! I suggest to my students that they start off a long drawing with a very simple gesture drawing: only a few light lines, but these will help immensely with placement and proportions.
This is possibly the best and most important list of drawing tips I've ever seen. Thx for putting it together!
I think that using negative spaces is one of the most important lessons I have learned and I learned it from one of the articles in American Artsist magazines. Being self taught I am always looking to improve my work. I seldom paint what I see but rather what I "don't see" from sideways and upside down until I block in most of my rough shapes and colours. Then I start fine tuning and even adjusting prespectives. As I work in acrylics I do not always work from light to dark, (as I do when I use watercolour,) but I work from back to front and try to remember that air is blue. Does that make sense?
I wish I could have said it as well. I still go dark and to light though in oil as find it makes more sense and even with charcoal I try to get the dark shapes out of the way, but for watercolors I also go light to dark. You magazine is so helpful especially for those of us who haven't the time we need for classes. Thanks so much for being there. The cost value for your magazine compared to actually taking classes is nil, and yet I find I always gain so much more knowledge from you. Thanks again
Hi, I'm new to this site, and I just found this list. Very useful! Thank you.
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