Messing up legs

9:14 AM, Saturday October 3rd 2020

Hi guys!

Since I started lesson 4 and now I'm tackling lesson 5. I realized I've been struggleing with the drawing of legs.

Most of the time I'm not satisfied with my work, and after I finish homework I usually redo some of the stuff. I'm successful with most things I do again but there is one thing I tend to mess up. Those are the legs, they look flat and random. IN the beginning I also had problems with their size.

I'm trying to focus more on them and experiment, but if you have any kind of tips or tricks on how to do them, I would be grateful.

0 users agree
10:20 AM, Sunday October 4th 2020

Hi! I don't have enough experience to help you, I'm here only to suggest you post a link to your legs drawing, so others can take a look and help!

0 users agree
11:00 PM, Sunday October 4th 2020

Agree with liska, I can only tell you to make sure you're using the sausage method for the legs, and drawing the intersections between them. If you have problems with the proportions and placement you can use dots to help you on the ghosting stage as well.

0 users agree
9:31 AM, Monday October 5th 2020

I have my struggles too with them, outside of drawabox. I have found that trying to find the flow of the lines and then do as much as possible in one sweeping lines helps. The curves on legs are quite subtle.

Perhaps do some gesture drawing to loosen yourself up. I use some of the timed life drawing model videos on croquis cafe to do this.

The recommendation below is an advertisement. Most of the links here are part of Amazon's affiliate program (unless otherwise stated), which helps support this website. It's also more than that - it's a hand-picked recommendation of something I've used myself. If you're interested, here is a full list.
Drawabox-Tested Fineliners (Pack of 10, $17.50 USD)

Drawabox-Tested Fineliners (Pack of 10, $17.50 USD)

Let's be real here for a second: fineliners can get pricey. It varies from brand to brand, store to store, and country to country, but good fineliners like the Staedtler Pigment Liner (my personal brand favourite) can cost an arm and a leg. I remember finding them being sold individually at a Michael's for $4-$5 each. That's highway robbery right there.

Now, we're not a big company ourselves or anything, but we have been in a position to periodically import large batches of pens that we've sourced ourselves - using the wholesale route to keep costs down, and then to split the savings between getting pens to you for cheaper, and setting some aside to one day produce our own.

These pens are each hand-tested (on a little card we include in the package) to avoid sending out any duds (another problem with pens sold in stores). We also checked out a handful of different options before settling on this supplier - mainly looking for pens that were as close to the Staedtler Pigment Liner. If I'm being honest, I think these might even perform a little better, at least for our use case in this course.

We've also tested their longevity. We've found that if we're reasonably gentle with them, we can get through all of Lesson 1, and halfway through the box challenge. We actually had ScyllaStew test them while recording realtime videos of her working through the lesson work, which you can check out here, along with a variety of reviews of other brands.

Now, I will say this - we're only really in a position to make this an attractive offer for those in the continental United States (where we can offer shipping for free). We do ship internationally, but between the shipping prices and shipping times, it's probably not the best offer you can find - though this may depend. We also straight up can't ship to the UK, thanks to some fairly new restrictions they've put into place relating to their Brexit transition. I know that's a bummer - I'm Canadian myself - but hopefully one day we can expand things more meaningfully to the rest of the world.

This website uses cookies. You can read more about what we do with them, read our privacy policy.