7:00 AM, Sunday April 26th 2020
Please post more, you cant really critique this. Thank you.
Please post more, you cant really critique this. Thank you.
In order to get everything to fit within the 15 minutes do a chunk, like one section of the rotated boxes for example. The way imo you should pick exercises should be based on what you are struggling with. For example if boxes are your weak point aim to have box related stuff as your warmups more often. ^_^
Ok I'm going to try to do my best and respond to what I think I can comfortably respond to :D
Superimposed lines: These all look fine! I didn't see any fraying on the starting ends which is good, it might be a good idea as warmups to practice more curves or zig zags. Overall that part seems good to me!
Ghosted lines: These look good too, some wobbling which is fine, you're still learning after all. Just keep it up with practice and potentially do a larger variety of line lengths as warmups.
Ghosted Planes: These look fine too! Just keep up practice.
Ellipses: Make sure your ellipses are reaching the tops and bottoms of the barriers, also work to avoid overlapping.
Ghosted Planes with Ellipses: These look good too
Ellipses in Funnels: These look good too.
Next Steps:
Move on to 250 box in imho. Although i would wait for someone more experienced potentially to check the box section although to me it looks good
Thank you very much haha!
This is another one of those things that aren't sold through Amazon, so I don't get a commission on it - but it's just too good to leave out. PureRef is a fantastic piece of software that is both Windows and Mac compatible. It's used for collecting reference and compiling them into a moodboard. You can move them around freely, have them automatically arranged, zoom in/out and even scale/flip/rotate images as you please. If needed, you can also add little text notes.
When starting on a project, I'll often open it up and start dragging reference images off the internet onto the board. When I'm done, I'll save out a '.pur' file, which embeds all the images. They can get pretty big, but are way more convenient than hauling around folders full of separate images.
Did I mention you can get it for free? The developer allows you to pay whatever amount you want for it. They recommend $5, but they'll allow you to take it for nothing. Really though, with software this versatile and polished, you really should throw them a few bucks if you pick it up. It's more than worth it.
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