6:20 PM, Monday June 20th 2022
Thank you for the compliments and advice. I think what I'm gonna do is use the 50 extra boxes a warm up before I go into Lesson 2's work, maybe 2 or 3 boxes until I get the back lines and the converging down.
Thank you for the compliments and advice. I think what I'm gonna do is use the 50 extra boxes a warm up before I go into Lesson 2's work, maybe 2 or 3 boxes until I get the back lines and the converging down.
A lot of folks have heard about Scott Robertson's "How to Draw" - it's basically a classic at this point, and deservedly so. It's also a book that a lot of people struggle with, for the simple reason that they expect it to be a manual or a lesson plan explaining, well... how to draw. It's a reasonable assumption, but I've found that book to be more of a reference book - like an encyclopedia for perspective problems, more useful to people who already have a good basis in perspective.
Sketching: The Basics is a far better choice for beginners. It's more digestible, and while it introduces a lot of similar concepts, it does so in a manner more suited to those earlier in their studies.
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