10:06 PM, Wednesday May 27th 2020
thanks for having a look.
thanks for having a look.
i am also working through same challenge. one thing i have started to do recently is to triangulate the inside hidden corner of the box before finalizing the last corner of the outside of the box.
my process has gone to:
1 start with the y
2 draw two planes, usually bottom of the Y, ensuring adequate convergence
3 triangulate the "hidden" inside corner but dont yet draw the hidden lines to it
4 triangulate the top outside corner with the help of the inside hidden corner
hope that makes sense. it has helped me
nice. you can see clear progression getting better as you went. iblike lastbone
i just finished lesson 1. your work is an inspiration. awsome!
i too just finished lesson 1 and moved on to 250 box challenge. you have done a very good job throughout and this is one of the best i have seen in reviewing about a dozen. good work and cary on
Next Steps:
250 box
i have also just submitted lesson 1 and have been reviewing several others submissions. yours is one of the best i have seen. your lines are confident and wobble free. the last few pages in particular were very well done. no doubt you are ready for 250 box challenge. good work
Next Steps:
very well done. ready for 250 box challenge
thank you so much for your detailed review. i will incorporate your suggestions.
thank you so much for your detailed analysis. i will incorporate your recomendations.
congrats getting through it. i am working through ir right now. your boxes on the early pages were much better than mine right out of the gate. your lines are very confident and seem to hit your end targets very well, almost never overshooting. well done
lines are wobble free and confident. but you seem to overshoot points often. seems to me maybe you could try to slow down your stroke a tiny bit and maybe ghost a couple more times to help better hit your target.
I just finished lesson 1 as well so no expert.
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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