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Topic : "hair technics using pencil?" |
WICKED member
Member # Joined: 19 Oct 2000 Posts: 275 Location: FL
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Posted: Sun May 20, 2001 5:02 pm |
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Ive been doing some pencil drawings and I'm improving in everything but the hair. I'm just not sure how to go about. Do I shade hair in and then do lines? It alwasys comes out like a huge mess.
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NukleoN member
Member # Joined: 11 May 2001 Posts: 236 Location: CA
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Posted: Mon May 21, 2001 4:58 pm |
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Think of hair as a mass, not individual hairs. Seperate the hair by where it is parted, and draw masses, THEN do hair rendering on those masses to suggest form.
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BlackPool member
Member # Joined: 11 Apr 2001 Posts: 157 Location: Dallas, TX
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Posted: Thu May 24, 2001 12:36 am |
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I will say it a different way. Long hair gathers in locks that lay side by side as well as overlap as they fallow the contoure of the head. Focus your initial attention on shadows to seperate those locks as well as the shadows along the hair line that nearly always seperate the light values of the hair from the face.
Here's a quicky sketch I did in pencil that better illustrates what I am talking about:
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WICKED member
Member # Joined: 19 Oct 2000 Posts: 275 Location: FL
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Posted: Fri May 25, 2001 10:05 pm |
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thanks guys. What about short hair though, I have the most difficulty with that. |
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Jezebel member
Member # Joined: 02 Nov 2000 Posts: 1940 Location: Mesquite, TX, US
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Posted: Fri May 25, 2001 10:13 pm |
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Personally I enjoy drawing hair as one solid mass with a hard outline, then filling it in with a lighter flat sort of shading. If I want areas to pop out a little more I use a white pencils for highlights. Darker areas like parts of the hair that might be in shadow I tend to shadow darker with the same "flat" technique.
A sketch I did from my costume book, you can sorta see what I mean:
I don't always do it this way but generally I want more attention to go towards the face, so I want to leave the hair as simple as possible. I think it works well... for me anyway
With longer hair I tend to draw out the locks and big blocks of shapes. But most of the time I still try to keep the lines (individual strands of hair) to a minimum so it's not too distracting. Hope this helps. |
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WICKED member
Member # Joined: 19 Oct 2000 Posts: 275 Location: FL
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Posted: Sat Jun 02, 2001 3:15 pm |
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thanks Jezebel |
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Impaler member
Member # Joined: 02 Dec 1999 Posts: 1560 Location: Albuquerque.NewMexico.USA
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Posted: Sat Jun 02, 2001 5:28 pm |
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You mean, there's other methods than just scribbling with one continuous line??
I like leaving the top of the head undrawn, then using short, thick strokes for short hair. |
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