Mainly on how to keep consistent widths for windows.
Ignore how the final result has wonky lines, i spit this out real quick so when i “inked” the final lines i just kinda did whatever, i’m pretty sure the method is technically sound.
This was to help my friend @lightofdoodles and she asked me to put it on tumblr so um sorry if this makes no sense. This is mostly for her (Hi) This assumes that you know some basics on perspective + know how to find the midpoint on something in perspective + you read the other tutorial I linked.
WebGL Wateris a great water simulator, with a sphere that can interact with the water’s surface. It can be paused which means you can then use it as a reference for lighting, reflections, refractions, etc.
when you’re a bi woman, you grow up fully expecting to spend your life with a man. when you’re young that doesn’t seem like a bad thing because you do like boys! boys are cute and make your heart do flips when they give you attention and show you kindness. it feels right that you will spend your life with one. you don’t think about how you feel around girls, because you think it’s normal. you don’t question why you have an urge to be affectionate with the girls in your life, why you are so fixated on pretty girls, why you want to be friends with the girls you think are cute but you’re too nervous to talk to them. you don’t question it because you like boys. but when you get older you realize that not every girl feels like you do about other girls. you hear the word lesbian spat as an ugly word, the idea of liking other girls is talked about like a disgusting thing. you realize it’s not seen as normal to want to kiss other girls or to fixate on the pretty girls in your favorite shows rather than the boys. so you focus on boys.
when you get older, boys are rude and crass and you feel like you should appreciate them if they treat you with an ounce of respect, but the girls closest to you still treat you with kindness and you feel more comfortable with them than you ever have around boys. you start learning about gay people, and that not everyone thinks it’s a horrible thing, but you still know that you like boys, so you don’t think about it. you finally hear the word bisexual, learn that there are people who are able to like both boys and girls. you think that might be you, but you probably like boys more. liking boys has always come naturally to you, so what if you love being around girls? you probably couldn’t feel romantic feelings about them. plus the word bisexual is wrapped in negative thoughts, it’s not real, it makes you a slut, you just want attention, you’re in denial. but time passes and you think that maybe you are bi, but you don’t want to tell people because you think you might just be convincing yourself of an attraction that isn’t there. but it is, and you find yourself thinking about kissing girls more. having sex with girls too. but that’s wrong, you shouldn’t think of girls that way, especially straight girls. that makes you creepy and predatory! no better than the boys you have started to grow wary of. you’re lying to yourself, you’re straight. you are going to end up with a man anyway, your mom says it’s just a phase, she’s probably right. but you start to see girls in relationships with each other on tv, online, some in your school. and you want it. you think it looks real and beautiful, like the most comfortable thing you could do. so maybe you could have that. maybe you can love girls and hold their hand. maybe your attraction to men doesn’t mean you have any less of a capacity to love a woman. you can picture it now. but you will marry a man, of course you will marry a man. but what if you don’t? what if you could have a wife? what if you grow old with a woman and love her more than anyone? what if you don’t have to think of men as the default. suddenly the word “wife” is the best word you can imagine yourself saying. you are attracted to men, but you love women and can spend your life loving one. there is nothing more healing for a bi woman than realizing that saying the phrase “my wife” is a reality you can have, a tangible reality, and one day you can get there.
As artists, we can often feel like we’ve plateaued on our progress because of lack of time, or resources. Not every artist has the time to go to art classes, and not every artist has the money to attend art-school and receive a proper critique.
That’s why I’ve created this blog! Introducing the…
The Redline Station is a blog that is dedicated to helping artists. If an artist is struggling with anatomy, or would like a critique on their art, they can submit the art using the SUBMIT YOUR ART button. Then, one of our moderator artists will pick up their piece and do a redline of it to help them better see the places that need fixing.
What’s a redline?
Good question!
A redline is when an artist will draw directly over a piece of art in order to show what the mistakes in anatomy are. By seeing the comparison of the art itself (at a lower opacity) and of the more accurate anatomical example, the artist can more quickly improve their drawing.
Our artists will take your submitted drawing and give you a redline. They will then post it to the blog alongside the original to help you compare the two and easily see what needs to be done. It’ll look somewhat like this!
Q: Can I submit anything?
A: Yes! Any type of art, human or animal is okay! The only thing that’s not okay is gore and pornography. The posts will need to be PG-13. (Kissing and suggestive scenes are okay, however.)
Q: Will you redline if the drawing is in my style?
A: Yes! Anime style, cartoony style drawings are also okay. The idea isn’t to fix the drawing to look more like ‘realism’, but to fix it to make it look more believable within the frame of style it’s already in.
Q: How many drawings can I submit for redlining?
A: For the time being, I’m the only one running the blog… In order to keep my sanity, I will accept only one submission per person and only keep submissions open for a limited time until I get more help. Which brings us to our next point…
Backgrounds can be really tough! I think the first hurdle in drawing backgrounds is-well, just drawing them, but also trying to understand them in a way that you can make them look inhabitable. The first tip to just getting started with backgrounds and environments is probably to simplify and break it down just as we do when drawing characters!
Here are a few posts I’ve come across that have some helpful information as well as a couple hacks that might be useful too!
“A Master post of Thomas Romain’s art tutorials” A photoset post showing a collection of tutorials that all show tips/tricks on how to draw out a simple floor plan and then make it 3D, understanding different eye levels and how that affects the perspective in a picture, how to keep characters/people proportional in a 3D environment, and more! by Thomas Romain (twitter)
“Meg Presents… (more) Perspective! (again)” A photoset post of a tutorial on perspective, helpful for giving step by step instruction and demonstrating the use of perspective. Even if you feel you have a good grasp on perspective, you may want to give it another look over. As it is the prequel post to the next suggestion. by @thundercluck-blog
“Background art 1″ An article by an artist who discusses the thought process and steps put into creating background art. It is insightful and gives interesting depth on understanding how to make background art that is interesting and have variety. By Leo De Wijs (personal website)
“A crash-course guide on perspective” A photoset post of a tutorial on how to place characters into a scene. It’s very basic and assumes for you to have a basic understanding over perspective as it uses simple grids to properly keep a character proportional no matter where they stand in a room and even at different angles! by @katamism
“BACKGROUND PAINTING TUTORIAL” A YouTube video tutorial done by a professional background artist for Disney, she speed paints a background while given tips and advice while the video plays. She works in Photoshop, but watching the video could give you some insight and inspire you on how to work on backgrounds too! by @lulusketches / Laura Price (YouTube)
Before going to post this ask, another ask came in that I felt a need to include in with this entire post. As it is pretty similar, but:
I believe the tutorials listed above should help you out, while the examples lean more towards realism, they can still very well apply to cartoony styles. It’s a matter of having a basic understanding perspective. Though you’re perfectly allowed to give backgrounds a style of your own!
Check out art created by background artists for cartoon shows, like @matthewthiebes or @stevensugar. Their background art works use perspective constantly.
Imagine a dragon at Antiques Roadshow, appraising its hoard
Imagine the dragon hoards monetarily worthless things like newspapers or old bones and the person appraising it getting more and more nervous about telling the dragon their stuff isnt worth anything
Imagine that the dragon knows this and just likes watching the person squirm.
The dragon actually hoards uncomfortable situations
I just love it when people come up with random weird animal or dragon things and iguanamouth illustrates them just because.