4/22 Blog #4 New Angles
Last week, I decided to take a head-on approach and get right into learning the basics of drawing the human face. I learned how to create an outline for where all facial features belong and how to use this outline to place said features in the correct spots. However, I feel that now it is important for me to get a decent grasp on more basics before I delve into more detail. By this, I mean that I plan on learning how to draw the human face from a side view, in addition to the front view I learned last week. Similarly to drawing a face from the front view, things get very technical. Once again, I utilized a video from Dan Beardshaw to learn how to do this. This is the same video I learned to draw a front-view face from. Last week, I only watched the first portion of the video to gain a basic understanding of constructing facial features. Now, I am utilizing the remainder of the video to learn to outline basic facial features on a side view.
The process of drawing this side view is largely similar to drawing
a front view. The process begins by drawing a simple circle. In fact, this can
be done by creating lines from the circle of the front-view face to the side of
the paper and drawing the circle for the side-view face. (Of course, assuming
that there is remaining room on the same piece of paper.) The same series of lines
and dots is used to divide up this circle so that there is an outline for where
all facial features belong. To begin, I drew two curved lines to form the jaw
line. The first was from the far left of the circle and the second was from the
bottom of the circle. These curved lines met to the lower left of the circle. I
drew an indent and protruding shape on the left side of the face to create the
keystone area and nose shape. (The keystone is that indent between the top of
the nose and the eyebrows.) Starting from the top of the keystone area, I sketched
an eyebrow. From the rightmost edge of this eyebrow, I drew a semicircle to outline
the eye socket and drew an eye inside there. I drew an ear-esque shape around
the center of the circle. The top of this ear worked as an indicator for the
hairline, which I drew with a zig-zag sort of line that eventually reached the
top of the circle.
Note for Mr. Perlman and Mr. Mcdaniels: I commented on the blogs of Sam Silverman, Kevin Lobo, and Hailey Alt.
ReplyDeleteI can see you understand what you are doing. You explained the process very well, great job.
ReplyDeleteSo cool to see the progress you're making, and I'm looking forward to seeing that face! It will be a challenge, but with the basics down, you'll do great!
ReplyDelete