3:19 AM, Tuesday July 7th 2020
Hi, I just want to say thank you for the advice. I will be starting the 250 box challenge today which I shouldv'e done weeks ago. I'll keep these in mind as I go.
















Hi, I just want to say thank you for the advice. I will be starting the 250 box challenge today which I shouldv'e done weeks ago. I'll keep these in mind as I go.
Hi, monigotestyle, I've been seing your entry and these are my thoughts about it:
The line section is good, although they could be a bit more fluid and confident, try to practice that aspect, the super impossed lines and the ghosting lines seem to be correct.
The ellipses need to be traced at least to times, and try to reach the edges of the planes drawn.
The box rotation is not too bad although the proportions are a bit off.
The perspective exercises are pretty good and consistent
The free rotation boxes exercises are bit scratchy but the aim of the exercise is reached.Next Steps:
I think you have the basic understanding to move to the next lesson.
Way to put in the work with the Superimposed Lines! You did alot more than I did. The only kinda suggestion I might have is on your Rough Perspective the box lines are a bit wobbly. I noticed when i was doing the exersizes if I started to for get to rotate my paper my lines would go wobbly. I hope that helps. Other than that awesome job! Your Rotated Boxes exercise is epic!
Awesome work! The only thing I can see is an issue i had the same thing with. On the Ellipses in Planes it looks like you slowed down to make the circles fit better. I guess it jsut takes practice. Aweomse job tho. Your Rotated Boxes is awesome.
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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