12:08 AM, Saturday August 17th 2024
Thank you so much for the critique! I will pay more attention to my construction lines and stick to it moving forward.
Thank you so much for the critique! I will pay more attention to my construction lines and stick to it moving forward.
Thank you soo much! The resources you showed me is really helpful! No need to apologize! It did came out looking like hatchings, if you didn't point it out I probably wouldn't find out other ways of doing it and make my intentions more clear.
Thank you so much for your critic! I also noticed that I was having problems with the ellipses but couldn't pinpoint what it was. Maybe I should do the 250 cylinder challenge.
As in the texture analysis exercise I think the closest thing I did that looks like hatching was an armadillo scale, they look like a vinyl, with all the grooves, and I didn't know how to approach it's cast shadow otherwise, any suggestions?
I will annex the revisions of the contour ellipses and forms intersection bellow:
I'm really grateful for your time and effort revising my work and also providing visual information. Have a great day.
Thank you so much for critiquing my work! I will continue to work hard for the course next step!
Not gonna lie after 200 boxes I was so done with this exercise lol
Thank you so much for your critique! I'm doing the 250 box challenge, and I think my perspective have improved!
Sorry for the yellow lines my black fine liner was empty lol.
Rapid Viz is a book after mine own heart, and exists very much in the same spirit of the concepts that inspired Drawabox. It's all about getting your ideas down on the page, doing so quickly and clearly, so as to communicate them to others. These skills are not only critical in design, but also in the myriad of technical and STEM fields that can really benefit from having someone who can facilitate getting one person's idea across to another.
Where Drawabox focuses on developing underlying spatial thinking skills to help facilitate that kind of communication, Rapid Viz's quick and dirty approach can help students loosen up and really move past the irrelevant matters of being "perfect" or "correct", and focus instead on getting your ideas from your brain, onto the page, and into someone else's brain as efficiently as possible.
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