green_clovers66
New member
- Feb 23, 2008
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Awesome! I like the way this thread is going!
@Moosey - yeah man the challenges never end. Once you finally get past getting the human form down the lo and behold you actually have to drape it in something! One of the best books I've ever seen on how to work out natural looking clothing on humans is
Amazon.com: Dynamic Wrinkles and Drapery: Solutions for Drawing the Clothed Figure (Practical Art Books) (9780823015870): Burne Hogarth: Books
Burne Horgarth drew the original Tarzan back in the day. He was an absolute master. In the illustration and cartoon world he's well known for a series of books he published on rendering complex subjects. He had a great knack for breaking things down. He would have... he started work as an artist at 15 and worked all the way through the depression. No small task that.
Here is a Flicker page that's got some looks at his Dynamic Wrinkles and Drapery stuff... I've owned the book continuously since I was a kid and I still refer to it. (crazy... can't think of many other things I've owned that long or that continuously) ... at any rate... take a look and see what you think.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/teohyc/3988697889/
Very informative. One thing that stuck in my mind is that fabric is very dynamic. Very fluid yet often terminates in sharp angles. The joints (elbows and knees) often act as anchor points that folds and wrinkles tend to radiate out from. You can see that in real life once you start to know where to look. Different materials handle differently as well. Silk is different than say the cotton of a kimono as would be the crisp cotton work shirt with cuff links. Once you get your head around it you begin to wrinkles and drapery in a different way. I've always found the hakama from Daito-ryu and other traditional arts fascinating because of the way they fold and gather.
You mentioned working from photo reference. Nothing wrong with that. It's not 'cheating' - we get sold this idea somewhere along the way that artists need to be able to create straight out of there head. A very narrow view. All the great masters throughout history have copied. In fact it was de riquer in the time of the Italian masters. One has to be careful with photo reference because the lens can distort and image.. and it's easy to fall into the trap of straight copying... that sucks the life out of a drawing. But nothing wrong with photo references as long as start to understand what to be looking for in them.
I'll do some overlay corrections on your drawing to give you an idea of how I'd approach draper in that scene. It's not that my way is the only way or 100% right but it's good to get revisions from someone other than yourself. As artists we tend to so comfortable with our work and that comes back to get us. When I was at Disney and before that at Hanna-Barbera... all day long my drawings came back to me covered in red... corrected rather unceremoniously by senior artists. ahhahahahah... my ego was shattered... but I learned a ton in a very short time just simply having someone mark up my drawings. Ideally... that's how school should be... but sadly most aren't.
@Moosey - yeah man the challenges never end. Once you finally get past getting the human form down the lo and behold you actually have to drape it in something! One of the best books I've ever seen on how to work out natural looking clothing on humans is
Amazon.com: Dynamic Wrinkles and Drapery: Solutions for Drawing the Clothed Figure (Practical Art Books) (9780823015870): Burne Hogarth: Books
Burne Horgarth drew the original Tarzan back in the day. He was an absolute master. In the illustration and cartoon world he's well known for a series of books he published on rendering complex subjects. He had a great knack for breaking things down. He would have... he started work as an artist at 15 and worked all the way through the depression. No small task that.
Here is a Flicker page that's got some looks at his Dynamic Wrinkles and Drapery stuff... I've owned the book continuously since I was a kid and I still refer to it. (crazy... can't think of many other things I've owned that long or that continuously) ... at any rate... take a look and see what you think.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/teohyc/3988697889/
Very informative. One thing that stuck in my mind is that fabric is very dynamic. Very fluid yet often terminates in sharp angles. The joints (elbows and knees) often act as anchor points that folds and wrinkles tend to radiate out from. You can see that in real life once you start to know where to look. Different materials handle differently as well. Silk is different than say the cotton of a kimono as would be the crisp cotton work shirt with cuff links. Once you get your head around it you begin to wrinkles and drapery in a different way. I've always found the hakama from Daito-ryu and other traditional arts fascinating because of the way they fold and gather.
You mentioned working from photo reference. Nothing wrong with that. It's not 'cheating' - we get sold this idea somewhere along the way that artists need to be able to create straight out of there head. A very narrow view. All the great masters throughout history have copied. In fact it was de riquer in the time of the Italian masters. One has to be careful with photo reference because the lens can distort and image.. and it's easy to fall into the trap of straight copying... that sucks the life out of a drawing. But nothing wrong with photo references as long as start to understand what to be looking for in them.
I'll do some overlay corrections on your drawing to give you an idea of how I'd approach draper in that scene. It's not that my way is the only way or 100% right but it's good to get revisions from someone other than yourself. As artists we tend to so comfortable with our work and that comes back to get us. When I was at Disney and before that at Hanna-Barbera... all day long my drawings came back to me covered in red... corrected rather unceremoniously by senior artists. ahhahahahah... my ego was shattered... but I learned a ton in a very short time just simply having someone mark up my drawings. Ideally... that's how school should be... but sadly most aren't.