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Topic : "Problems with Foreshortening" |
ashura junior member
Member # Joined: 15 Jun 2004 Posts: 14
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Posted: Tue Jun 15, 2004 11:54 pm |
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Hi ,
One of the problems that I've to constantly dealt with when drawing in perspective is foreshortening an object that is tilted at a certain angle. Can anyone provide me something like a formula or a tutorial on the net on how to deal with foreshortening precisely and not just by mere estimating (This is how I do it and it often ends up really crappy!). THANKS IN ADVANCE!! |
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Ian Jones member
Member # Joined: 01 Oct 2001 Posts: 1114 Location: Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
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Posted: Wed Jun 16, 2004 3:41 am |
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If you are drawing from life or reference, just force yourself to look beyond the subject matter and just draw the shapes. If it's a reference image, turn it upside down and you'll be able to draw just the shapes much more easily. If you are working from your mind... try blocking in a simple perspective box (bounding box) to grasp the overall shape and foreshortening. Hopefully you can use this as a reference kind of frame to help you continue. I have done this once or twice and it seems to work relatively well for me, although sometimes it doesn't. |
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skullmonkeys member
Member # Joined: 05 May 2004 Posts: 183
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Posted: Wed Jun 16, 2004 7:19 am |
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You have to 'draw through' your drawings.
This site can guide you to the right direction
http://drawthrough.com/
The tutorials there would help.
Apparently 'draw through' principle is so important that the guy [scott neville] named his website after it. |
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