scyllastew

The Relentless

Joined 6 years ago

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scyllastew's Sketchbook

  • Sharing the Knowledge
  • The Relentless
  • Basics Brawler
    11:12 PM, Thursday June 10th 2021

    I can see you made some improvements here but you are still keeping many of your sets of lines perfectly parallel on the page. Box 7 on page 3 of your work is a fair example of how your sets of lines should still converge slightly, even when drawing boxes with shallow foreshortening. Remember that your sets of lines should not appear perfectly parallel on the page for this exercise.

    Before having you move on I will assign you 10 additional boxs. For these boxes I want you to use more dramatic foreshortening instead. You can read more about that here.

    If you have not seen it already, I recommend you check out this video I made where I demonstrate how I plan and draw my boxes.

    Make sure you reread the lesson in its entirety before starting on these revisions.

    Next Steps:

    10 Additional boxes with more dramatic foreshortening.

    When finished, reply to this critique with your revisions.
    9:10 PM, Wednesday June 2nd 2021

    This is a good improvement! I can see that your sets of lines are doing a better job of converging towards their shared vanishing points. You also checked all of your convergences correctly and I can see that the quality of your mark making continues to improve as you practice the ghosting method.

    I will mark this lesson as compelte and you can now move onto lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    3:19 PM, Saturday May 22nd 2021

    Sorry about that! I must have hit the wrong button. I'm marking it as complete now, and since this is in reply to the original submission, it should be backdated to when this was submitted (so you should be good to submit your Lesson 2 work).

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    6:21 PM, Friday May 21st 2021

    This is a good improvement! Your sets of lines are doing a better job of converging towards their shared vanishing points. I will go ahead and mark this lesson as complete and you can now move onto lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    2:53 PM, Wednesday May 19th 2021

    Congratulations for completing the 250 Box Challenge!

    I can see you made some good improvement with the quality of your mark making. Your lines steadily become straighter and more confident looking as you progressed through the challenge. You drew your boxes at a pretty good size and with a variety of orientations and foreshortening. You also start to do a better job of getting your sets of parallel lines to converge more consistently towards their shared vanishing points!

    While your converges do improve overall I think this diagram will help you as well. When you are looking at your sets of lines you want to be focusing only on the lines that share a vanishing point. This does not include lines that share a corner or a plane, only lines that converge towards the same vanishing point. Now when you think of those lines, including those that have not been drawn, you can think about the angles from which they leave the vanishing point. Usually the middle lines have a small angle between them, and this angle will become negligible by the time they reach the box. This can serve as a useful hint.

    Congrats again and good luck with lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    2:51 PM, Wednesday May 19th 2021

    Congratulations for completing the 250 Box Challenge!

    I can see you made some good improvement with the quality of your mark making. Your lines steadily become straighter and more confident looking as you progressed through the challenge. You drew your boxes at a pretty good size and with a variety of orientations and foreshortening. You also start to do a better job of getting your sets of parallel lines to converge more consistently towards their shared vanishing points!

    Before we begin I just want to mention that in the future, when you go to scan your homework submissions, it would be better to scan your homework using the "photo" setting instead of the "drawing" setting. The drawing setting tends to up the contrast on an image and can cause you to lose some of the subtlety in your line work.

    While your mark making has improved, I do see that you still hesitate in some areas. This is likely due to prioritizing your accuracy over creating a smooth, confident looking line. Just remember that the confidence of the stroke is far and away your top priority. Once your pen touches the page, any opportunity to avoid mistakes has passed, so all you can really do is push through. Hesitation serves no purpose. Mistakes happen, but a smooth, confident mark is still useful even if it's a little off. If the line is wrong, we leave it and move onto the next step. Accuracy is something that you will improve on as you continue working through Drawabox and practice ghosting.

    Now, while it is important that you use the ghosting method of each mark you make while doing Drawabox one thing you can try to help with ending your marks closer to where you want them is lifting the pen off of the page rather than stopping the motion of your arm. You can do this with extra line weight as well. I would also recommend that you read this comment by Uncomfortable, where he talks more about hesitation.

    I noticed that you still struggle a bit with applying your extra line weight. When you go to add weight to a line it is important that you treat the added weight the same way you would a brand new line. That means employing the ghosting method here as well. You should be taking your time to plan and ghost through your mark so that when you go to execute your extra line weight, it is done confidently and so that it blends seamlessly with your original mark. This will allow you to create more subtle and clean looking weight to your lines that reinforces the illusion of solidity in your boxes/forms. Extra line weight should be applied to the silhouette of your boxes, as shown here. I recommend that you try adding your extra line weight in no more than 1-2 pases so that you can easily identify mistakes in your work. This diagram should help also you better understand how to properly apply your extra line weight.

    Finally, while your converges do improve overall I think this diagram will help you as well. When you are looking at your sets of lines you want to be focusing only on the lines that share a vanishing point. This does not include lines that share a corner or a plane, only lines that converge towards the same vanishing point. Now when you think of those lines, including those that have not been drawn, you can think about the angles from which they leave the vanishing point. Usually the middle lines have a small angle between them, and this angle will become negligible by the time they reach the box. This can serve as a useful hint.

    Congrats again and good luck with lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    2:35 PM, Wednesday May 19th 2021

    What you described above is a very normal experience. As you continue to practice and grow your skills you will find exercises like this become easier. The only advice to give here is, do the best you can at the time and then move onto the next step.

    Your revisions look pretty good. I can see your sets of lines are doing a better job of converging towards their shared vanishing points. The quality of your mark making is coming along well too.

    I will go ahead and mark this lesson as complete and you can now move onto lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    3:19 PM, Tuesday May 18th 2021

    Congratulations for completing the 250 Box Challenge!

    I can see you made some good improvement with the quality of your mark making. Your lines steadily become straighter and more confident looking as you progressed through the challenge. You drew your boxes at a pretty good size and with a variety of orientations and foreshortening. You also start to do a better job of getting your sets of parallel lines to converge more consistently towards their shared vanishing points!

    While your mark making has improved, I do see that you still hesitate in some areas. This is likely due to prioritizing your accuracy over creating a smooth, confident looking line.

    Just remember that the confidence of the stroke is far and away your top priority. Once your pen touches the page, any opportunity to avoid mistakes has passed, so all you can really do is push through. Hesitation serves no purpose. Mistakes happen, but a smooth, confident mark is still useful even if it's a little off. If the line is wrong, we leave it and move onto the next step. Accuracy is something that you will improve on as you continue working through Drawabox and practice ghosting.

    Now, while it is important that you use the ghosting method of each mark you make while doing Drawabox one thing you can try to help with ending your marks closer to where you want them is lifting the pen off of the page rather than stopping the motion of your arm. You can do this with extra line weight as well. I would also recommend that you read this comment by Uncomfortable, where he talks more about hesitation. You can also reread this section from lesson 1 about arcing.

    You appear to have replaced a few of your boxes along the way. For future reference, while working through Drawabox we do not cross out or attempt to cover up our mistakes. Mistakes happen. It is important to recognize when a mistake is made and why. Then, we move onto the next step. You should not start over or redo work unless a TA or Uncomfortable has told you to in an official critique.

    Keep in mind as you progress through Drawabox and begin to construct more complex forms that it is important to put in the time and focus required to execute each step correctly and to apply the ghosting method to every step of the process, as explained here. If you ever have any questions or are uncertain about what your next step is or how you should be doing something, you should first reread the instructions and if you are still uncertain you can always ask questions here.

    I noticed that you still struggle a bit with applying your extra line weight. When you go to add weight to a line it is important that you treat the added weight the same way you would a brand new line. That means employing the ghosting method here as well. You should be taking your time to plan and ghost through your mark so that when you go to execute your extra line weight, it is done confidently and so that it blends seamlessly with your original mark. This will allow you to create more subtle and clean looking weight to your lines that reinforces the illusion of solidity in your boxes/forms. Extra line weight should be applied to the silhouette of your boxes, as shown here. I recommend that you try adding your extra line weight in no more than 1-2 pases so that you can easily identify mistakes in your work. This diagram should help also you better understand how to properly apply your extra line weight.

    Finally, while your converges do improve overall I think this diagram will help you as well. When you are looking at your sets of lines you want to be focusing only on the lines that share a vanishing point. This does not include lines that share a corner or a plane, only lines that converge towards the same vanishing point. Now when you think of those lines, including those that have not been drawn, you can think about the angles from which they leave the vanishing point. Usually the middle lines have a small angle between them, and this angle will become negligible by the time they reach the box. This can serve as a useful hint.

    Congrats again and good luck with lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    3:42 PM, Sunday May 16th 2021

    Congratulations for completing the 250 Box Challenge!

    I can see you made some good improvement with the quality of your mark making. Your lines steadily become straighter and more confident looking as you progressed through the challenge. You drew your boxes at a pretty good size and with a variety of orientations and foreshortening. You also start to do a better job of getting your sets of parallel lines to converge more consistently towards their shared vanishing points!

    While your converges do improve overall I think this diagram will help you as well. When you are looking at your sets of lines you want to be focusing only on the lines that share a vanishing point. This does not include lines that share a corner or a plane, only lines that converge towards the same vanishing point. Now when you think of those lines, including those that have not been drawn, you can think about the angles from which they leave the vanishing point. Usually the middle lines have a small angle between them, and this angle will become negligible by the time they reach the box. This can serve as a useful hint.

    Congrats again and good luck with lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
    3:41 PM, Sunday May 16th 2021

    Congratulations for completing the 250 Box Challenge!

    I can see you made some good improvement with the quality of your mark making. Your lines steadily become straighter and more confident looking as you progressed through the challenge. You drew your boxes at a pretty good size and with a variety of orientations and foreshortening. You also start to do a better job of getting your sets of parallel lines to converge more consistently towards their shared vanishing points!

    I would recommend that you try adding extra line weight to your boxes as a permanent step for your future warm ups. When you go to add weight to a line it is important that you treat the added weight the same way you would a brand new line. That means employing the ghosting method here as well. You should be taking your time to plan and ghost through your mark so that when you go to execute your extra line weight, it is done confidently and so that it blends seamlessly with your original mark. This will allow you to create more subtle and clean looking weight to your lines that reinforces the illusion of solidity in your boxes/forms. Extra line weight should be applied to the silhouette of your boxes, as shown here. I recommend that you try adding your extra line weight in no more than 1-2 pases so that you can easily identify mistakes in your work. This diagram should help also you better understand how to properly apply your extra line weight.

    Something to keep in mind as well, when you are working through Drawabox you should be employing the ghosting method for every mark you make. This includes the hatching that we sometimes use for our boxes.

    Make sure that you are checking all of your convergences for your boxes and do not skip any lines even if they appear to join another mark. You should still check all of your lines individually and never skip any.

    Finally, while your converges do improve overall I think this diagram will help you as well. When you are looking at your sets of lines you want to be focusing only on the lines that share a vanishing point. This does not include lines that share a corner or a plane, only lines that converge towards the same vanishing point. Now when you think of those lines, including those that have not been drawn, you can think about the angles from which they leave the vanishing point. Usually the middle lines have a small angle between them, and this angle will become negligible by the time they reach the box. This can serve as a useful hint.

    Congrats again and good luck with lesson 2!

    Next Steps:

    Continue to lesson 2!

    This critique marks this lesson as complete.
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