Eurofurance Panel - How to improve your Art - References
7 years ago
Hey, fluffy friends :)
As promised, I share a list of books and Youtube Channels, that are helpful if you want to improve your Art. Feel Free to add interesting Titles in the Comments <3
Books:
James Gurney: Color and Light
Scott Robertson: How to Draw
Scott Robertson: How to Render
Michael Mattesi: Force Drawing Human Anatomy
Marcos Matel Mestre: Framed Ink
Terryl Whitlatch: Principles of Creature Design
Youtube Channels:
Proko
Cuberush
CTRL+Paint
Sinix Design
Marco Bucci
Don"t forget: the key for improving is not only reading, but, most of all, actually drawing!
And, of course, have fun with it!
See you next year <3
As promised, I share a list of books and Youtube Channels, that are helpful if you want to improve your Art. Feel Free to add interesting Titles in the Comments <3
Books:
James Gurney: Color and Light
Scott Robertson: How to Draw
Scott Robertson: How to Render
Michael Mattesi: Force Drawing Human Anatomy
Marcos Matel Mestre: Framed Ink
Terryl Whitlatch: Principles of Creature Design
Youtube Channels:
Proko
Cuberush
CTRL+Paint
Sinix Design
Marco Bucci
Don"t forget: the key for improving is not only reading, but, most of all, actually drawing!
And, of course, have fun with it!
See you next year <3
I think you can still profit a lot from force drawing human anatomy, because a lot of your art is anthro and some of the characters have slight anatomy issues.
It's cool, you take a more painterly approach. If you'd like feedback on one picture, you can send me a note with a link attached :)
Happy drawing!
Thank you for taking a look at my works. "Slight anatomy issues" is probably a understatement x3. A lot of my works are anthro because I find them easier to do than ferals x3. I still have not found an anthro style for me, that I like. My anthros look too much like human torsos with animal feet attached but in most cases I actually want them to look more like the actual animal, more feral (a bit like the black dragon that is my latest submission). I bet you found most mistakes around the rib cage and the hip, that's where I see them a lot. Also face.
Thank you. I like painting a lot. I always admired the traditional painters so I switched from digital drawing to digital painting at some point, the transition was hard but worth it, I guess. Also I can skip the tedious part of doing a clean sketch and outlining x3. I try to reinvest the saved time into more details, like painting the fluffy or scaly parts.
Thank you for offering some feedback. I've no specific work in mind which I could send you but if I can take this offer for one of my future works or sketches, that would be nice :3.