Thursday, August 27, 2009
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The best way to learn any skill is to practice and teach it. This blog allows talented folks the ability to critique and be critiqued. Techniques will be perfected, eyes will become sharper, and we will go from good to great. Honest, constructive, and sincere (not mean-spirited) comments are welcomed and appreciated. We will focus primarily on animation principles with flexibility on other subjects (technology, clean-up).
8 comments:
Looks good. Have you tried using red, blue and then black pencils as you go? Red and some blues are non-repro, so they disappear when copied.
I have used blue and red pencils for my much older lessons, but I felt like trying black pencil for size. Looking at it now, I'll probably go back to them.
These are perfect. Solid, organic, smooth, natural. They make sense. You should show these to John K. I think you'd have the chops for his new blog.
I'll probably do it later. I'm starting school again soon, and will be doing a lot more work like this, along with some personal work. When the time comes, I'll show my work to John for his consideration.
You have great line quality too, and with the solid construction, its amazing. How do you get the nice lines? Do you erase a lot, not at all, sometimes?
I try to use as little of the eraser as possible. But erasers are essential for fixing mistakes. Once you get the hang of the pencil, you wouldn't need to erase so much.
And also, how big are you drawing? Copies seem easier to me when they are bigger.
I draw fairly big.
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