Quick Sharpie sketch of Riker from Best of Both Worlds, Part I:
The comparison below shows that the hair and eyes are OK; the beard doesn't line up.
Ah well. Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Words, Art & Science by Anthony Francis
Quick Sharpie sketch of Riker from Best of Both Worlds, Part I:
The comparison below shows that the hair and eyes are OK; the beard doesn't line up.
Ah well. Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Masego from his amazing one-take performance on "Tadow" with looping artist FKJ. How did I do? Eh, meh, it looks like I dented his face in compared to the original.
As usual, I missed the ~3 degree tilt of the head, and while dude is thin, I gave him a giraffe neck because I stopped measuring when I got to the shoulder section. Sigh.
Sigh. Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick Sharpie sketches of the Star Trek: The Original Series cast.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick Sharpie sketches of the Doctors. Some came out better than others, but it gave me practice drawing 13 faces quickly, without the luxury of obsessing over each one.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Another rushed day, another quick sketch from memory fail. Despite having drawn Capaldi like 4 times in a row, when I try drawing without reference it just doesn't look like him. The above is day 161; below is day 162, when I decided to focus on just eyes. Again, I'm doing quick Sharpie sketches to force me to focus on shapes and proportions, where my biggest flaws are, rather than fine details of rendering.
I swear, this has nothing to do with what's going on at Kill 6 Billion Demons right now:
Oh, if you're not reading K6BD, you should.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Now that's better. Tilting the page, pencil roughs, and measurements of the face were critical here to getting the drawing better - though, even with careful roughs, I did that weird thing where one part of the face lines up and the other doesn't, causing a dent on the right side of the page when compared to the original below:
Still, it doesn't line up too terrible:
I see a couple of places that need work, particularly my measurement of jawlines. Or, looking more closely, picking which line to emphasize in the jawline.
On to another subject tomorrow ...
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Wow, this quick Sharpie sketch of Peter Capaldi from memory was a complete fail. I was trying to save time so I can crash early, but the Twelfth Doctor here ended up looking like a bad extra from Aeon Flux. Comparing to yesterday's reference shot (which I did not use, but nevermind) you can't make them line up, but if you try, the features need to be squashed about 80%, the hair about 90%, and the neck, well, the neck is a caricature and is not fixable by any amount of warping:
Oh well. Back to reference drawing (or leaving myself more time).
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Now that's Peter Capaldi. Pencil roughs with Pilot V5 and Sharpie outlines (and erased with a Pentel Clic Eraser, not a 25 year old pieces of Bellcore swag). Let's see how I did:
Not completely terrible, and it even mostly lines up:
Much better than my first attempt, where that Bellcore eraser did me wrong:
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Halfway into the roughs of a drawing of the Twelfth Doctor, I had a terrible eraser accident. I'd grabbed a random pencil out of a jar and, while the graphite was good, apparently the eraser had gone bad, leaving a horrible splotch of pink-orange across my page. The pencil is labeled "Bellcore" which, based on either my own personal history of when I might have acquired it OR when Bellcore ceased to exist by that name, means it's around twenty-five years old. Apparently the erasers in #2 pencils that are really old can dry out, causing the problems that I had tonight. Oh well.
Still drawing every day, maybe just not always erasing.
-the Centaur
A couple quick ink sketches (Pilot V5, no roughs) because I'm on vacation, damnit. Above, Day 155, a quick sketch from memory of my earlier drawing of Neil from Tenet. I wonder how well I did - probably, poorly - but I'm not going to concern myself with comparisons today, I want to crash early.
Below, Day 156, a sketch of Jeremiah from the picture of her on my convention backdrop (same drawing from the Jeremiah Willstone frontispiece and website). No roughs again, which made it tricky, but even though this drawing is sloppier than the original, I see things that I've learned from the Drawing Every Day exercise that could help me improve these kinds of drawings in the future.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Super quick Sharpie sketch of Alphonse Mucha's Spring, no roughs at all, with my wife watching over my shoulder while I quizzed her about titles for a new Jeremiah Willstone novel (we settled on the provisional title JEREMIAH WILLSTONE AND THE FLOATING GARDENS OF VENUS).
As for the drawing, the individual parts came out OK, but I gaffed the relative alignment of the falling hair and eye on the left side of the face (on the right side of the drawing) and the whole thing ended up lopsided compared to the original:
There is no way to make that hair or jaw line up right, but the face itself isn't terrible:
Well, back at it. Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
As it says on the tin. Still, drawing every day.
-the Centaur
P. S. Shadow in the Cloud lived up to the hype - my wife and I watched it tonight.
As it says on the tin: my wife and I went for a long walk, which we normally do at the very end of the day just before I hit the hay - and then I realized I hadn't done my drawing. So you get a quick sketch.
Drawing every day continues, hopefully with more rendering, tomorrow.
-the Centaur
Quick sketch of a model from a sale on the Dell website (which I can no longer find). Roughs in pencil, sketched with a Pilot V5, no rendering to speak of. Let's see how I did:
Not entirely terrible, and I'm getting better at overall proportions in the face, but I am consistently tilting faces - this time roughly 3-4 degrees - and the further I get from the face the worse the proportions are. There's no way to line up the hat and the face simultaneously due to the tilt, and I completely lost the script on the arm angles, though the outlines of the arms aren't entirely terrible.
Reflecting on the past, seems like the angle of the page is less important for the squashing phenomenon than just paying attention to distances, as this was a sketchbook-in-the-lap drawing, and by consciously looking at the sizes of things (and using construction lines) I kept it together.
Welp, more work to do on the broader landscape - and that dang tilt.
And with this, my posts have caught up with my drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick Sharpie sketch of another scene from Shadow in the Cloud. I have to turn in early, so this was quick as can be, but I put special focus on trying to get the proportions right and paying attention, if not to the angle of the sketchpad per se, the distances between pieces. Let's see how I did:
As usual, I missed a couple of degrees of tilt, but I really only had to scale this, not squash it. The mouth was too narrow, the nose too low, and the hair too narrow, but otherwise, not too off the mark. I tried squashing it to make sure, but no, this is about as good as it gets. Construction lines I think would really help with the nose and mouth, as it's hard to get the proportions right on the first try; the width of the hair and the scarf would have been salvageable if I'd kept up the feature size comparison I'd done on the cheek (roughly, her head height is about five foreheads, and facial features are three forehead heights wide; but the hair extends far more than I measured, as does the scarf).
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Welp, another failure - and I did this quick Sharpie sketch twice, with the sketchpad held on my knee supported by a bag to try to get that 90 degree angle. But even the second try failed to match the face well (admittedly, Chloƫ Grace Moretz is screaming her head off here, because a gremlin is trying to take her head off here, all while Japanese planes are shooting at her and her fellow airmen are hitting on her like, all at the same time and stuff, no pressure or nothing):
Looking at this, if you squeeze it say 5% vertically, some features line up better, but the hairline and jawline are actually worse, so I'm showing below one that is not scaled. I think the real problem is that I simply am not accurately seeing what is there, and need to pay closer attention to angles and lines (or at least, the way I recreate distances as I draw the lines I think that I have seen):
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Well, this was a fail. Quick Sharpie sketch of Chloƫ Grace Moretz from Shadow in the Cloud. Again, the sketchpad on the knee, again the protractor - but I skipped the extra bag, as I'd raised the pad to the right angle by sitting differently. Well, either I settled shortly thereafter, or I'm doing something else wrong, because I stretched her head compared to the original:
As usual, there's a 2-3 degree tilt I'm missing, but more importantly, the head I drew had to be shrunk vertically by about 15% in order to make it line up (and even then, there are other problems). I think construction lines will help, which I will return to in a few days if I cannot correct this stretching problem through the tilt of the canvas.
Welp, back to the drawing board.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick Sharpie sketch of Elizabeth Debicki as Kat from Tenet. Yes, rendering with a Sharpie is kinda crummy, but for this exercise I was specifically focusing on page angle (using a protractor and a small folded bag to raise the sketchpad to 90 degrees to my eye while sitting on my knee), head tilt, eye tilt, overall landscape proportions, and making sure the eye closest to the edge of the face was close to the edge of the face. Let's see how I did:
Wow, I forgot how beaten down Kat looked in this scene. :-( Overall, I don't think the sketch came out too bad. I missed a roughly two degree tilt to the scene, and the eyes are still not perfect (more clear if you match the cheek rather than matching eye-nose-mouth) but the hypothesis that the root cause of my stretched / squashed heads was drawing on a poorly angled page seems preliminarily confirmed:
Perhaps I'll try a few more of these, focusing on the angle of the page, and if I can keep getting the proportions right, maybe we can go back to trying to do actual renders.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur