1:58 AM, Thursday July 16th 2020
hello thanks for the advice it helped me a lot!
i have some examples of me practicing. im not sure if its right but i attempted haha....
for #1 in the example, i have no idea where to start and end the line?
hello thanks for the advice it helped me a lot!
i have some examples of me practicing. im not sure if its right but i attempted haha....
for #1 in the example, i have no idea where to start and end the line?
Here is how I would do example 3 ( roughly ). Once you have establised the point where the edge meets the plane you then need to think how the two planes interact. How does one cat the other ( it has to be on the planes surface. ). Expect to see more angled lines not just right angles.
sorry for the late reply! thanks for the feedback!!
This is a remarkable little pen. I'm especially fond of this one for sketching and playing around with, and it's what I used for the notorious "Mr. Monkey Business" video from Lesson 0. It's incredibly difficult to draw with (especially at first) due to how much your stroke varies based on how much pressure you apply, and how you use it - but at the same time despite this frustration, it's also incredibly fun.
Moreover, due to the challenge of its use, it teaches you a lot about the nuances of one's stroke. These are the kinds of skills that one can carry over to standard felt tip pens, as well as to digital media. Really great for doodling and just enjoying yourself.
I would not recommend this for Drawabox - we use brush pens for filling in shadow shapes, and you do not need a pen this fancy for that. If you do purchase it, save it for drawing outside of the course.
This website uses cookies. You can read more about what we do with them, read our privacy policy.