A no-regrets Sharpie sketch of Epicurus, from the following bust, allegedly of Epicurus.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Posts published in “Artworks”
Semi-quick sketch of David Hilbert. Face is a bit squnched to one side, and I could have put in more work on the wrinkles. But frankly, the original picture is dark enough under that hat that it's hard to interpret, and it's late and I'm tired, so I just went with it instead. More tomorrow.
Quick sketch of Susan Francis. The head angle ain't bad, and the eyes aren't as oversized, but I'm still doing something wrong with the overall face landscape. Perhaps time to return to drawing the roughs upside down, or perhaps a few tracing exercises to help tune my perception of face feature sizes. Oh, and also, I think her hair got dented in the upper right, now that I look at it one more time. This was just a misstep of that particular hair feature - I intended it to go further out, but just gaffed it.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick sketch of Dustin Hoffman as Willy Loman. I got the head tilt right for once, but I seem to have exaggerated the size of the forehead with respect to the rest of the face, and perhaps widened the mouth / nose area, taking away from Hoffman's distinctive look. But it's late and I'm tired, so I rushed it.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Drawn from a small centaur statue I have in the genre toys / reference objects collection on my drawing desk. Didn't come out too bad, and the perspective and angle were an interesting challenge.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Suuuper quick sketch of Gene Robinson, done by tracing over my own ink roughs.
As for the analysis, eyes off a bit, yeah, whatever, it's time for bed.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
As it says on the tin: it's late and I'm tired, so here's a quick sketch with a big honking Sharpie on 9x12 Strathmore, no roughs whatsoever. Roughs would have helped correct a few errors of outline and proportion - I didn't quite get the roundness of gabby there on the left - but real roughs would have taken longer than 10-15 minutes, and I'd have been up to 3AM again when trying to get to bed early.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Sharpie sketch of the Apostle Paul, interpolated from the earliest descriptions and paintings we have on record: "A man of middling size, and his hair was scanty, and his legs were a little crooked, and his knees were far apart; he had large eyes, and his eyebrows met, and his nose was somewhat long.” The joined eyebrow is from the description, but the pointy beard, sideburns and clothes come from these:
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Suuuuper quick sketch of Willem Dafoe in The Last Temptation of Christ, done with a big honking Sharpie. My first failed drawing on Strathmore 9x12 served as a basis for a quick resketch on 9x12 tracing paper, again with the Sharpie - it has such a crystallizing effect on your drawing, as those huge darn lines cannot be taken back and you just gotta GO with it. Not altogether bad for 10 minutes, though that darn "head de-tiltification" thing is still working against me:
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick sketch of Reginald Fuller, using pencil roughs (started upside down to get the proportions, then rotated back to normal to fix the details, which was harder than expected; the first upside down one turned out to be more useful for me to see the features and relationships, but I only got it right once I put it right side up). Then a quick render with Sakura Pigma and Micron pens and a Sharpie.
Not ... altogether bad, though it could have used another pass.
He, also, looks so happy.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Super quick sketch of Robert Axelrod, done by tracing over my own roughs twice then rendering over that with my standard Sakura Microns. Eyes WAY too big, face too wide, I didn't quite get the head tilt (as usual), and it seems like I cut off part of the top of his head, though I was partially able to fix it.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Suuuper quick sketch of E. T. Jaynes with minimal roughs and one big honking Sharpie, rescued from a bad shading attempt by tracing over my own drawing, and them I'm like, hey, I can leave the tracing paper over the original attempt and that gives me my grey layer. Didn't quite get the head tilt:
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Quick sketch of John Watson. Kind of reminds me of a cross between H. P. Lovecraft and Clark Kent.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
It's late and I'm tired and want to get to bed early, so here's a suuuper quick sketch of Xiao from f@nu fiku hanging out at a bridge of some kind. (She's up in the cables, goofing around over a vast drop, because she is insanely acrobatic and unafraid of heights, living as she does on a lighthouse cantilevered out over a sheer cliff face).
Drawing (well, sketching) every day.
-the Centaur
What started to a quick sketch ended up with me pulling out all the stops so I didn't have to stay up to 4:30 in the morning. Roughed with a 2B pencil on Strathmore 9x12 Toned Tan, then inked with Sakura Micron pens, with shading and white highlights with Winsor-Newton Hard, Medium and White Charcoal plus a little 2B and final outlining with a Sakura Pigma brush pen. I like doing renderings on toned paper as you can go up to white and down to dark, giving you more ways to push the drawing. The face still is too wide, and is missing something, compared to the source image (credited to Maurizio Codogno):
[caption id="attachment_5096" align="alignnone" width="600"] Douglas Hofstadter in Bologna, Italy - 06 March 2002[/caption]
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Charles Darwin, roughed on tracing paper, then traced over the roughs, both with a Sakura Micron 1 pen on the theory it's late and I'm tired (and I'm more comfortable sketching with ink than pencil anyway).
The rough enabled me to get the guidelines of the shape in place, letting the drawing focus on the details. Still, I'm exaggerating eyes and especially noses. Sigh. More work to do ...
... drawing every day.
-the Centaur
King James, a quick sketch roughed out with a 2B pencil and inked straight with a Sakura Micron 1 on the theory it's late and I'm tired. Face came out a little too tall, at least based on comparison with this detail of the original painting by John de Critz:
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Ayn Rand, roughed and inked in my usual fashion on Strathmore 9x12, No.2 pencil, Sakura Pigma and Micron pens, Sharpies for deep blacks. I squeezed the face proportions a bit, trying to get it right, and started dropping a few of my crutches on this (the heavy outlines). Again I did the trick where I turned it upside down to get the landscape right, particularly the triangle of eyes and nose; I even got the eyeline right, but failed to extend that courtesy to the mouth, which is bent a bit to the horizontal.
Nevertheless, I think, it came out pretty well: she looks so happy.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Hannibal Lecter, sketched on Strathmore 9x12 in #2 pencil followed by inking via Sakura Micron and Pigma pens. I think this one turned out pretty well, though the eyes are a tad less symmetrical than Sir Anthony Hopkins, eyebrows too far, and a few subtle details of the collar and mask aren't quite right.
C. S. Lewis, same medium as Lecter. His face came out a bit bloated, I think - probably, I rushed it since it was late. Nevertheless, spinning the picture 180 still helped how it came out quite a bit.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur
Blaise Pascal, roughed on Strathmore 9x12 with a 2B pencil (upside down to get the shapes right) and inked with Sakura Pigma and Micron pens. Forehead's a little off, slightly too big compared to the drawing; the left eye is not bent downward in the same way; actually, it seems like I squeezed that in a bit as I've been doing on some other drawings. In all fairness to myself, I actually increased the size of his head on purpose, as many older paintings seem to collapse the head a bit, and I didn't bend the left eye down, as I didn't see that distortion in any of the other paintings I could find of Pascal.
Drawing every day.
-the Centaur