STREAM [ONLINE]

STREAM

Info:

I’ll stream publicly now, at 11 AM EDT / 17:00 CEST (^0^)
I will draw my OC Lana for the Animania Pimp my Character Contest 2015.
I’ll sketch expressions and since many of you were interested in how I draw expressive faces I’ll stream this ^0^ After that I’ll start Outlining so if you wanna see how I get my clean outlines just stop by.
Since I have a Deadline I’ll stream for quite a long time, only taking small breaks, so feel free to drop by whenever (uwu)
Music will be on.
Mic will be off (probably).
I will answer questions.
I am a bit nervous but I hope a few people will drop by! See you then! (QwQ)/

RULES
– Please be friendly! If you seek a fight you will be banned, sorry.
– You may post Links but always write where and to what they lead. If it’s NSFW then please say so!
Talk about anything you want, as long as it doesn’t provoke a fight, or it’s offensive and I ask you to drop the subject.
– Chat will be in English & German.
– If someone makes Languages Mistakes do not make fun of them! Not everyone’s Native Language is English or German.
– No Advertising.
Sharing your Art Sites & Pictures is allowed, but don’t spam them.
– I will review your Art or give tips if asked to.
Feel free to ask Questions!

FAQ
– If I don’t answer you, I’m not ignoring you, I probably just didn’t see it. Just Cap your Question and ask again.
– I’m working with a Cintiq 12WX and Paint Tool SAI
– I don’t use particular brushes or textures and can’t link them to you.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Ich werde jetzt öffentlich streamen, um 11 AM EDT / 17:00 CEST (^0^)
Das Bild zeigt Ansichten von meinem OC Lana, die ich für den Animania Pimp my Character Wettbewerb 2015 zeichne. Ich skizziere Gesichtsausdrücke da viele von euch Interesse daran hatten wie ich Emotionen zeichne werde ich das streamen ^0^ Danach fange ich mit den Outlines an, also, wenn ihr sehen wollt wie ich meine ordentlichen Lines hinbekomme schaut vorbei.
Da ich eine Deadline habe werde ich wohl eine ganze weile streamen mit nur kleinen Pausen, also guck ruhig jederzeit vorbei (uwu)
Musik wird an sein.
Mikrophon wird (vermutlich) aus sein.
Ich werde Fragen beantworten.
Ich bin etwas nervös, aber ich hoffe ein paar Leute schauen vorbei! Bis dann! (QwQ)/

REGELN
– Seid bitte freundlich! Falls ihr Streit sucht werde ich euch bannen, sorry.
Links zu posten ist erlaubt, aber schreibt immer dazu wohin und zu was sie führen. Falls es NSFW ist sagt das!
Redet über alles was ihr wollt, solange es keinen Streit provoziert, es anstößig ist, oder ich euch bitte das Thema sein zu lassen.
– Der Chat wird in Deutsch & Englisch sein.
– Falls jemand sprachliche Fehler macht, macht euch nicht über ihn/sie lustig! Nicht jeder hat Englisch, oder Deutsch als Muttersprache.
– Keine Werbung.
Teilt eure Künstlerseiten & Bilder gerne, aber spamt diese nicht.
– Wenn ihr wollt werde ich eure Bilder reviewen und Tips geben.
Stellt ruhig Fragen wenn ihr wollt!

FAQ
– Falls ich euch nicht antworte, dann mache ich das nicht, weil ich euch ignoriere, vermutlich habe ich es einfach nicht gesehen. Schreibt eure Frage einfach nochmal in Großschrift.
– Ich arbeite mit einem Cintiq 12WX und Paint Tool SAI.
– Ich benutze keine bestimmten Brushes oder Texturen und kann sie deswegen auch nicht verlinken.

fallenzephyrart:

If 18 or 20 palettes wasn’t enough, I present to you: my 100 Palette Challenge! This is a collection of some of my favourite palettes from color-palettes and Adobe Kuler and I thought it would be really fun to have a huge variety of palettes to chose from

If you would like to participate in this challenge, I ask that you DO NOT repost this anywhere else, including deviantART; please REBLOG this instead! I have the challenge uploaded to deviantART as well, so please check it out there if you want to do it on deviantART!

Here’s some of the drawings I’ve done with a few of these palettes c:

Please send me a Character (maybe with a Scenario, Clothes or something else too) and a Number and if I like it I’ll draw the character in that Palette! (^0^)9

(PS: I’m  much more likely to draw a Character I know than an OC or an Unknown Character, however if I like the design/palette I MIGHT draw them too uwu)

mvtk42:

draa:

kyaptan:

bunnyshadeow:

anon asked me how do I draw different sized boobs so I whipped up a tutorial (I draw slow, sorry) I am not a good expert at boobies soo sorry x2! weh haha

basically flat = pointy-ish, as boobs size increase the lower half gets rounder, then the top half. boobies are floppy towards the sides due to gravity

shape/perspective of boobs

all the oppais!

even though I am still not really good at drawing boobs at all sigh… i hope you find this useful even for a bit hahaa……..;;

tribby is the oppai master

I once had an Anon asking me for the same request…! So whoever you are I think this tutorial/guide does an excellent job outlining different sizes/angles, hopefully this helps you :)!

Tutorial: from paper to digital.

kaiami:

Hey ya’ll! I’m not much of a tutorial person, but this was a technique that I learned from Syuzuki, one of my favorite artists back in the day, when I was 13. I memorized the technique and it’s been one of the most useful things I can do on photoshop. This was something that really helped me, and I hope that it will be useful for even some of you.

In this tutorial, I will be going step by step how I take something from my sketchbook and color it on photoshop.

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bluucat:

The answer is: Well, sort of!

I noticed that a lot of things I’ve been recommended or found useful aren’t really in the masterlists of artist references on tumblr – and the same goes for helpful drawing exercises. So I decided to make my own post.

HOW TO KILL ARTIST’S BLOCK

  • There is no such thing as artist’s block, if you frequently draw from life.
  • No, really.
  • If you are really, truly committed to improving your craft, then it does no good to sit and complain that you “don’t know what to draw”. There is so much around you to draw! 🙂
  • In public, try doing gestures of people that walk by. Cafes and shopping malls are great for this, because you have a plausible excuse to be sitting somewhere. Ideally, you don’t want people to notice you’re drawing them— they might try to pose, which makes them look stiff and unnatural. 
  • The best targets are people studying, anyone deep in conversation, and people at cash registers.
  • If there are no people around, draw objects and rooms and practice your perspective.

AWESOME AND FUN EXERCISES FOR ARTISTS AND ILLUSTRATORS

  • Draw a portrait where a body part other than the face/head is the focus.
  • Do a full spread for a children’s story. It can be a fairy tale or an original story. Make sure to utilize good design principles and pick readable, high quality fonts that match your art style.
  • Draw something using only high contrast light and shadow- no lines, no color, no midtones. 
  • Pick a crime report from the news, preferably an unconventional one. Illustrate it as best as possible, making sure to use a dramatic perspective and lots of realistic detail.
  • Choose an object — one you haven’t drawn very much before. Gather lots of reference images. Draw it in two and three point perspective — bonus points if you can take the references and draw them from different angles than they were photographed. The goal here is to be able to visualize it easily without effort. This is a good exercise for product design and ideation, as well as concept art.
  • Draw thirty people from life.
  • Draw thirty people from your imagination. Make sure they’re just as well proportioned and realistic as your sketches from life.
  • Do twenty studies of your hand, in various positions. Bizarre angles and positions are fine, but it’s more helpful to examine the construction of it and get used to drawing hands realistically.
  • See above, but with your feet.
  • Draw a study of a skull. Do not stylize it. Be careful to pay attention to the proportions and texture.
  • Remember your object? Imagine it in a setting where it could be good or evil— perhaps interacting with humans or other objects. Avoid obvious angel/devil associations. Draw 3 pages of thumbnails and sketches imagining it in this way.
  • Choose a thumbnail and do two larger sketches of it, and then pick one to bring to completion. Make sure it’s in proportion with accurate lighting for the situation. 
  • Redesign a fairy tale’s characters in either a modern or non-European setting. Provide costuming references, and make sure to do character sheets and full turns of each.
  • Design your own deck of cards — make sure the borders and pattern on the back are paid as much attention as the figures on the fronts.
  • Bonus points if you also design and illustrate packaging for the above.
  • Do you have a favorite piece of fanart? Draw it as original characters- chances are, you’ve likely put a lot of thought into the relationships and personalities of your favorite characters or OTP, which will show through in an original piece. This is a decently good way to use fanworks in your portfolio, if you feel that they’re better than your original work.
  • Draw a car. A really realistic car. Now draw it from a perspective you find really difficult. You are not allowed to take more than half an hour on this total— cars are actually just boxes with some strategic curves, so they should become very easy to gesture once you retrain your brain.
  • Draw a table in perspective 5-6 times or so, concentrating on the way it casts a shadow. Make sure to define your light source.
  • Design a toy! Draw it from multiple angles — imagine you’re presenting this to someone who has to actually model and produce it. Include as much information as humanly possible. Make sure to include an illustration of its use — you can also create an advertisement, if you’re so inclined.
  • If you watch TED lectures, draw portraits of your favorite speakers while you’re viewing them. Try and finish the sketch during the duration of the talk.
  • Do an original illustration inspired by two of your favorite illustrators or artists— combining two should help prevent you from directly copying anyone, and force you to think a little harder about solving problems within a work.
  • Do 30 studies of animals in motion – housepets or birds are probably going to be the easiest, unless you live by a zoo.
  • Fill three full pages of your sketchbook with hard surface studies. (Cars, ships, tractors— you get the idea.) Try to define them with quick, confident lines.
  • Make a comic with one panel for each hour of your day. Avoid shortcuts like over the top, animeish emotes and chibi versions of yourself. Make sure to include environments.
  • Draw ten illustrations as a series that purposely do not tell a story. They must be as ambiguous as possible. This is really difficult — was originally an assignment from Phoebe Gloeckner, and almost nobody managed to be completely ambiguous. The trick to it is to make sure to create thumbnails of the series first, and look at your work very critically — if anything looks too obviously negative or positive, alter it accordingly.
  • Draw yourself combined with your favorite animal, or an animal you feel represents you well. Avoid traditional anthro depictions— try replacing your body parts with the parts you’d find most useful, or thinking of yourself like a sphinx, etc.
  • Create a poster for your favorite play.
  • Draw yourself at age 7, and age 70. Realistically. Avoid thinking of how cool or uncool you’d be or were. Using pictures of your younger self, or relatives, might help.
  • Paint a still life with unconventional lighting or objects. If you must use fruit, use weird fruit, or light it from below.
  • Pile books into a tower and draw them in perspective. It’s also fun to make cities out of them, etc.
  • Draw yourself every day for a month in the same media to track improvement. Use a mirror, not a photograph.
  • Remember your still life? Now illustrate it in the style you’re accustomed to using.
  • Draw six busts (head and shoulders) in profile, concentrating on creating an interesting silhouette.
  • Do color studies of your favorite movie scenes. If you can’t find screenshots, pause the movie and paint from your television or laptop. Detail’s not as important as strong shapes.
  • Draw your favorite place by your home.
  • Illustrate a fortune cookie.
  • Draw a treehouse or birdhouse and include as many details as possible.
  • Design a historical character, and try to make them recognizable by quirks of wardrobe or unique facial features. “Being extraordinarily attractive” does not count.
  • Do the 30 day monster challenge! 
  • Illustrate your favorite recipe. It doesn’t have to be fancy. “How to make pizza rolls” will even suffice. Seriously.
  • Make a business card for yourself. Illustrate it. Hey, everyone needs one- and it’s a great exercise for working under strict constraints, since you’ll need to make sure your name and contact info are clearly legible.
  • Draw the weirdest object you can possibly find. IKEA is a really awesome place to find weird objects, if you can’t find any in your home.
  • Design a knight of the round table, and make sure to research armor, etc— it’s hard to draw! Great practice.
  • Draw ten or twenty plants that are currently seasonal.

BOOKS THAT ARE REALLY USEFUL!

  • The Art of Ralph McQuarrie. Yeah, this is expensive. But it’s one of the few artbooks that shows an entire process of illustration— if you’re not sure how to proceed from thumbnails to mockups to final pieces, this is probably what you want to be lookin at.
  • How to Analyze People on Sight by Elsie Lincoln Benedict and Ralph Paine Benedict. This is available for free online— awesome resource for character design, as it teaches you to think about external characteristics as indicators for personality. Even if it’s not always the most accurate thing ever.
  • Leonardo DaVinci’s Notebooks. Yes, I know. Your relatives have even probably tried to get you to look at these. If you can find a good printing of them, though, it’s a really good look at a well used sketchbook.
  • The Selected Works of TS Spivet. Not actually a real art reference book, but so many beautiful illustrations and well laid out. Worth a look.
  • Drawing with Imagination. Lots of exercises to do if you “can’t think of anything to draw”.
  • Any batman artbook. Any of them. I have the OnStar promo one from about ten years back, and it’s still great. There’s a huge mesh of styles going on, and seeing how much thought is put into the character designs and environments is well worth your money. Plus, Batman is cool.
  • Any Pixar or Disney artbook that shows the visual development process. The Princess and the Frog is a particularly good example of this, and possibly my favorite, even though I dislike the actual film. They really make sure to show all of their art department’s sketches and preproduction work.
  • The Practice and Science of Drawing by Harold Speed. Also available on project gutenberg, and will revolutionize the way you think about drawing. It’s a bit wordy and dated, but worth it alone for the lesson that we do not draw what we see, in reality. Go read it.

WEBSITES THAT ARE VERY USEFUL

USEFUL THINGS TO OWN

  • Brown paper sketchbook. Makes defining volume a lot easier, for beginners and advanced artists alike— just get a white pencil and go crazy with highlights.
  • Small sketchbook. For all the times you can’t bring an a4 one someplace. Also good for sketching in public. Moleskines are good, as they get mistaken for ordinary notebooks often. See notes on sketching humans in public.
  • White pencils.
  • Several weights of mechanical pencil— awesome for when you can’t drop pencil shavings places.
  • A small package of prismacolor pencils. You don’t need to go crazy, but high quality pencils are really a necessity, IMO. A 12 pack will do. If you find they’re too soft, or keep snapping, try using the Verithin variety instead— they’ve got harder leads.
  • A good ruler. At least 6”. Tape pennies to it to avoid bleeding ink.
  • Tracing paper, so that you don’t have to completely redraw your semi-final sketch if you like it.
  • Masking tape. Keeps paper still on a worktop, and keeps tracing paper in place. Touch it to your clothes a couple times before sticking it to your paper to reduce the stickiness and possibility of your paper ripping.
  • Pen and ink. Also some good sable brushes. 
  • Carbon dust. Not a necessity, but it allows you to “paint” while still getting the effect of a pencil drawing.
  • Good kneaded eraser.
  • Good white plastic eraser.
  • A COMFORTABLE bag. That holds your electronics and wallet as well as all of this. 
  • Fingerless gloves. If your hands cramp often, these will help.
  • A website. Coroflot.com or tumblr will work fine. If using a tumblr, make a separate one for your art.

Wheew. That’s all I have for now, I think!

askrattyspokes:

Here’s a pretty fun challenge for you guys!

Go to this site and generate a single random Pokemon.

Now try to come up with at least three different character designs for that pokemon, no matter what you get. (Yes, even if you get Klink. That’s what makes it a challenge!)

This is an nice exercise to improve your design skills, but is also especially useful for PMD-E! Being such a big group, you often bump into a lot of Pokemon of the same species, and sometimes accessories/colors aren’t enough to tell them apart. Being able to put a lot of variation into characters is a great way to prevent that from happening.

That and it’s really fun.

EDIT: Hey, if you do this, would you mind tagging it #pokedesign? I’m interested in seeing these and I’m sure other people would be, too!