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IMBass
October 15th, 2007, 03:14 AM
After about a year hiatus due to a incompatible scanner I am back with a Wacom Bamboo (soon to be Intuos) and back drawing. I still do my traditional studies because I'm better at it but all of my postings will be digital until I get a camera or preferably a new scanner.

Here are a few of my sketches and some completed works (as complete as they got) I have done.



Critique/advise away. Thanks in advance. I love this community.

-Josh

Beelow
October 15th, 2007, 04:43 AM
Just keep drawing. Do it from life from ref and from the dome. Have fun doing it as well. I will keep an eye out for your thread. Just keep posting. Don't let no one posting discourage you. It takes time to get noticed here in the conceptart and welcome. Enjoy the many inspirations and critiques you get from here. Art school heh who needs art school (pun intended).XD Again welcome.:wink:

IMBass
October 16th, 2007, 01:05 AM
Beelow: Thanks. I've already gained so much just from browsing here. Now it's time to get involved.

Here are some studies from today. I bought 2 books; Anatomy Drawing School and Human Anatomy For Artists, both by Andras Szunyoghy and Gyorgy Feher. I did a few studies out of one of them today. Looking at the self portrait you would be hard pressed to believe I also did the Mako shark. It is almost embarrassing. Any critiques/advice, etc. would be awesome. Thanks in advance.

Eponine
October 16th, 2007, 03:18 AM
Heyes! Nice work.. I love the tattoo design You've done there.. really cool! :D The shark is awsome too.. is that digitally or traditional?

IMBass
October 16th, 2007, 03:47 AM
Eponine: Thanks. That tattoo design is, for better or worse, permanently on my arm now. The mako shark was done traditionally on paper with pencil. I spent probably about 5-6 hours on it. It's my pinnacle piece as far as realism. I've yet to get to the digital world, still perfecting my traditional chops.

IMBass
October 20th, 2007, 04:55 PM
Finally. These are a few studies I did last night. From my anatomy drawing books, magazines, and photos of myself.

The first are some eyes I did from different references.

Second are some noses I did from reference as well.

Third is a better self portrait. From a picture of myself. The last portrait I did was from a mirror. This one is way better but still not what you would call an accurate recreation of myself.

Man....I really need to draw more. A lot more. I have too many hobbies.

Thanks.

IMBass
October 28th, 2007, 01:40 AM
I'm starting to wonder if anyone is actually paying attention to my little thread here. Oh well, I feel obligated to continue drawing and posting and that's what is important.

Here is a few more studies I've done.

Any suggestions/advice/critiques are certainly welcome. Thanks.

IMBass
October 30th, 2007, 12:25 AM
One more for the books. A drawing of a woman out of my anatomy drawing book. The face is without reference. The rest is from the drawing within the book. Thanks for looking.

IMBass
October 30th, 2007, 03:33 AM
Quick addition. Part one of a two piece project I did in my 2D design class.

Done with pen. Black paper. Tracing paper.

Yes. I was/am a Mudvayne fan.

IMBass
October 30th, 2007, 03:53 PM
Part two of my 2D design project. Old.

IMBass
October 30th, 2007, 03:55 PM
This is another study I did from my anatomy drawing book. Reference of course. I'm not confident enough yet to throw one from my imagination. I'll give it a shot soon.

Miles_
October 31st, 2007, 03:38 AM
One thing I've noticed in your self portrait, is a lot of the features, especially the eyes, are just drawn as what you think an eye looks like, not what your eye actually looks like. When you draw from life you have to be looking at the shape of your features exactly. Don't change anything and it will look correct. Its sort of hard to explain but I hope you gt what I mean. Thanks for the post in my book. Getting more replies just happens the more you draw. You'll get noticed eventually. Keep it up.

IMBass
October 31st, 2007, 03:44 PM
Thanks for the advice. I know what you mean. It's part habit. I used to draw imaginative stuff when I was younger and just drew things how I thought they should look. I've since started studying my anatomy. The two books I bought are massive. I also just generally have trouble with self portraits. I've never been able to do a good one. Mostly because I don't take my time and actually look.

I'll have a few more studies up tonight when I get out of work. Thanks.

IMBass
November 1st, 2007, 01:00 AM
Here are a few studies I did last night. Trying to see if Im grasping what I'm practicing. The first two are without reference.

The last is an outline sketch of a little gargoyle statue I have. I was really tired and kind of ran through it. How fitting, a gargoyle sketch...on Halloween...weird.

IMBass
November 3rd, 2007, 02:27 AM
Quick sketch dump before I hit the bed. Got a long day of work ahead of me tomorrow.

Here's hoping I'll get some advice. I'm sure there is something that I can improve that isn't obvious to me. Someone tear these apart and tell me what to work on. Thanks.

HunterKiller_
November 3rd, 2007, 04:47 AM
Hey dude. Thanks for droppin' in my SB.

You've already made a good start by studying the human form, keep doing this.
The shark study is very good, I think you should do more similar stuff, and put the same time into your anatomy studies.

There's already a wealth of information here on CA.
I have a few main pointers to offer you.
1. Draw as much as possible. Make time for it, there is no magic, consistent practice is the only sure way to success.

2. I think there's one exercise in particular that will be of help to you, and that is blind contour drawing. Drawing a subject from life without looking at the page. Follow along the contours of the subject with your eyes and try to match it with your pencil.
This exercise is solid good for learning really to draw 'what you see' and break the habit of drawing what you think you see.

3. Focus on one time at a time. Art is a long journey, and you will only achieve competency if you take it one step at a time.
Set goals for yourself, make clear plans about what you're going to focus on one at a time. Right now, I think the biggest factor for you is to break the habit of drawing what you think you see as oppose to what's really there.

Do the blind contour exercise consistently. The results won't be pretty, but they aren't suppose to be, they're just what they are - exercises.
Measure when drawing, carefully compare what you have on the page with the subject, measure with your pencil, measure the angles and lengths, and correct any mistakes you see.

Keep it up.

Guilemo
November 3rd, 2007, 05:14 AM
Thats some pretty useful information, HuntedKiller!

Anyhow, IMBASS. Keep doing these studies. They'll help you tremendously in the future, when it comes to creature design and so forth. I'd say I see some improvements in the drawings already!

Also, try to get more control over the shading. You just have to practice a lot to get the shading right and develop you own technique.

I dont really know what more to say. Whatever you do, keep drawing!

Best
Henning

IMBass
November 3rd, 2007, 04:31 PM
HunterKiller: Thanks a lot for the feedback. I'll do some blind contour drawings. I know, I need to put more time in my drawings because the mako is something I'm incredibly proud of and that took hours. It's hard to make time to draw for that long but I must.

Guilemo:I can shade fairly well I think. The mako is a good example. I've been really trying to work on my hatching/cross-hatching which I'm terrible at. Thanks for the advice.

IMBass
December 22nd, 2007, 01:04 AM
It's been a while since I've posted in here. I have many other things I enjoy doing and can't neglect them. I'm back, with a finished piece. It's a direct copy of a picture of lilies I did for a lady. My scanner refuses to work with my computer since I upgraded the OS. Not sure why. I took a picture with a camera instead. I spent probably 6-8 hours on it sporadically. It's done with pencil and made apparent to me the obvious limitations of using graphite. You can't get a true black. I made due and tried to adjust the values accordingly. Let me know what you think.

Oh, and I'll get some more sketching done and hopefully my scanner will work at some point. Thanks.

-IMBass

raspa
December 29th, 2007, 01:31 AM
Nice lilies~
I think pen and ink may be fun to practice during your anatomical studies- See how what you see translates into line thickness, shapes of shadow, etc.
Don't forget everything that can happen within your contour lines too- studying yourself under bolder light and shadow may help you see more form.
Thanks for seeing my sketchbook. :3

Anthis
January 6th, 2008, 05:54 PM
Hey IMBass!

Hah! Thats indeed the book you mentioned in my sb. Good stuff ;)
About that; accurate studies. Also judging from the shark and especially those lilies your rendering and drawing from ref is pretty good.

I've always had a weakness for those kind of black/white things with text and pictures; great stuff.

You're working on anatomy, especially from imagination. Some of the previous ppl have already pointed out some good stuff on that.
I'd only add that to it that I'm seeing quite some contour drawings. Perhaps you should focus on the shapes and structures on the inside, which will reflect in what you see on the outside. Many anatomy books (like Bridgman) cover this topic. They build up a human body from basic shapes which you can easily remember. I think that would be a great help.

Keep sketching! Hoping to see more from you later.

IMBass
December 21st, 2008, 02:48 AM
It has been almost a year since I have posted in my sketchbook. I upgraded to Leopard and it killed my scanner. HP's solution was instead of fixing the problem to suggest I buy one of their other printers. I neglected. I got discouraged and started slacking in my drawing. I recently got back into it and was given a Wacom Bamboo Fun as a gift from a friend. Best gift ever!

I'm getting used to it still. It came with Photoshop Elements 6 and Painter Essentials 4. I decided to throw up something I just did in Photoshop to kind of get a feel for it. Any tips for Photoshop or Painter? I absorb like a sponge. Any tips for how to do what I did better?

By the way, don't expect much....it's a lame pink ball.

IMBass
December 22nd, 2008, 11:04 PM
I've been practicing line control in Photoshop. All of my work from here on out will be digital until I can afford a new scanner (Non-Hewlett-Packard, of course). Simple cube I did to try to get lines fairly straight.

If anybody has any tips or links for Photoshop please fill me in. I have Photoshop Elements 6 and Painter Essentials 4.

IMBass
January 3rd, 2009, 01:53 AM
I've decided to start with basics before jumping into the more complex. I have been taught a lot of things in my art classes but I don't believe I really understood how to employ them or when to employ them. So, I'm starting from the beginning but moving past stuff I'm certain I have down.

I'm dabbling in Seedling's Perspective 101 and Form's Environmentoring threads for the time being. I'll be posting the occasional piece from there in my sketchbook. I'm still learning and adapting to digital. Bare with me and any advice or encouragement is appreciated. Thanks.

IMBass
January 5th, 2009, 02:25 AM
More 3 Point Perspective. Not sure if the very bottom one is drawn correctly. I think so. :/

xobgob
January 5th, 2009, 04:33 AM
Very nice work thanks for stopping by at my SB your work is nice the lilies rock :rocker: wanna see more more more...

IMBass
January 5th, 2009, 10:27 PM
Simple polygons in 1, 2 and 3 point perspective.

*ViRuS*
January 5th, 2009, 10:52 PM
nice start man. perspective is very important =)
you can get to a black with graphite:
start with soft graphite, like a 8b or so, and go ontop of that with harder graphite like 4b and so on. go up the scale into the h's, which should grind the softer graphite into the paper and give darker lines. depending on the paper your using, don't be afraid to use water to help graphite stain the paper, and go back on top of it. layers and layers and layers. if the graphite is sliding on you, spray it with fixitive, and go at it some more.

charcoal is the quick way though =)

IMBass
January 5th, 2009, 11:23 PM
*ViRuS*: Thanks a lot man. That was a very helpful post. If you have any advice on digital fill me in.

*ViRuS*
January 6th, 2009, 01:06 AM
the same rules apply to digital art. it's just a different medium with different techniques. it all starts with drawing though. if you can't draw, nothing will ever be as good as it could be. (which is why i'm drawing my ass off trying to learn ;) )

IMBass
January 8th, 2009, 04:07 AM
I think I've gotten 3 point perspective down pretty well. Going to download the Carl Dobsky vids payday as well.

I've moved to drawing shadows. I'm not certain if I have constructed this one right. I have done it with pencil and paper and done it correctly but this digital study for some reason looks incorrect. Can someone confirm whether or not it is correct for me? It's super late, my brain is failing me and I have to work in the morning but I needed to get something accomplished for the night.

P.S. I have PSElements, is there a way to draw a straight line and see where it is going to cross things? I know how to draw a straight line but I don't know where the hell it's going to cross so I just eyeball it until it crosses where I need it to. Thanks.

Flashback
January 8th, 2009, 08:04 AM
You can also use is book "Perspective Made Easy by Norling" as a study/reference. It has very clear explanations and the book is somewhat pocket-sized.

IMBass
January 8th, 2009, 09:07 PM
One more shadow for the books.

IMBass
January 8th, 2009, 11:14 PM
In the words of Agent Smith.....More.

IMBass
January 9th, 2009, 01:34 AM
Sorry about multiple posts. I didn't think I was going to be drawing this much today. I'll hold onto them and post all at once next time.

IanLlanas
January 9th, 2009, 02:03 AM
Hey IMBass, you're off to a great start! The Mako and the lilies look excellent! What anatomy books are you studying? May I suggest "Constructive Anatomy" by George Bridgeman it's 8 bucks new and worth ten times that IMHO. I can tell from your anatomy studies that you are looking too much at outline and not thinking about form and volume enough, that's fine for now, but the sooner you start to see the underlying structures the better. Keep cranking art out!

IMBass
January 9th, 2009, 03:26 AM
Thanks for the Bridgman recommendation. I'll track a copy down. You pretty much pinpointed my problem with drawing people. I decided to start over with the basics and move forward. Starting with perspective and environments.

The anatomy books are Human Anatomy For Artists and Anatomy Drawing School by András Szunyoghy/Dr. György Fehér

PeNcIl ReBeLlIoN
January 9th, 2009, 05:00 AM
Looks like you're building a strong foundation to move forward from, Keep at it, this looks positive :)

IMBass
January 13th, 2009, 01:43 AM
Well, I bought the Dobsky Vol. 1 and 2 videos. Invaluable stuff in there. I recommend to everyone. Waiting on Vol. 3.

I was going to post the stuff I did using Dobsky's method but I didn't know if that was cool.....so....here is an idea I have had in my head for a while, it is a scene from a dream I had a long time ago. I'd really like to flesh it out and do a kick ass job on it. We'll see.

IMBass
April 7th, 2009, 12:11 PM
Sketch dump! I'm back and I have a scanner. Scanner and a Wacom, I have no excuse to not post now. I prefer my pencils though, digital just doesn't feel right yet.

Just some sketchbook stuff and some work I've been doing from CCSears mentoring thread.

I'll dump the rest once I can borrow some internetz and resize them.

Brun
April 7th, 2009, 12:26 PM
great studies, keep up with it, they will show of :)

IMBass
April 8th, 2009, 12:49 PM
Here's the rest. This is what I've been doing in between classes and work. Bridgman, life studies, Lemen, posemaniacs and I'm reading drawing on the right side of the brain and watching Massive Black vids.

Mindbendermind
April 8th, 2009, 01:38 PM
Hi there IMBass,
thanks for commenting in my sketch. Really enjoyed following the improvement in yours. I haven't gotten into any real anatomy studies yet. You think I should try and copy the drawings in Bridgman's "Constructive anatomy"? (have it as pdf) Or is it to early, better to keep at gesture drawings (posemaniacs)? How valuable are the negative space drawings at posemaniacs compared to the gesture ones? Many questions to get through the lovely jungle that's art...

Keep up the good work :-)
~M

IMBass
April 11th, 2009, 12:31 AM
Some posemaniacs.com gestures I did at lunch just before work.

IMBass
April 11th, 2009, 02:12 AM
Little more before bed. Any advice?

IMBass
April 12th, 2009, 10:56 AM
Yesterday's work. Bridgman again and gestures.

IMBass
April 13th, 2009, 12:08 PM
The only thing I got done yesterday. I had to work a double shift. Bleh.

IMBass
April 14th, 2009, 02:34 PM
Have you ever felt like you were in an art class but not learning a damned thing? Thats how I'm feeling right now with my Intermediate Design and Color class. I'm in class, she is talking but I'm learning nothing. I thought I would come out the other end of the class with something to add to my small skill set. Nope. Anyway, here is yesterday's little bit.

IMBass
April 16th, 2009, 01:01 AM
Did some shitty drawing today. Watched Seven Pounds and tried to sketch from it but got frustrated and called it a night.

I hope that the artists I look up to were as shitty as I am right now at some point in their life, otherwise what the hell am I doing.

IMBass
April 20th, 2009, 10:41 PM
Been absent a few days. Working through Betty Edwards book plus dealing with these last few weeks of school. I'm a little shaky tonight, don't know why.

Here is my shit attempt at Altair from Assassin's Creed to break up the monotony of my studies. It is from reference of course. I might finish it later, I'm not sure.

IMBass
April 21st, 2009, 12:12 AM
Fuck it. I'm done with it. I hate it, couldn't muster the motivation to finish it proper. Isaac Clarke is up next to be butchered.

IMBass
April 22nd, 2009, 06:25 PM
I tried to edit my previous post to add the reference image. It was being stupid for some reason and I couldn't edit anything so I'm just replying to my own post.

I figured if I posted the reference picture I might actually get some advice. So, here it is.

IMBass
May 1st, 2009, 02:50 PM
Well, I've been in the process of moving into a new apartment and sorting out some other life stuff. Studying Bridgman, some gestures and a little WIP of Isaac Clarke. There are some repeats in there because I figure it is better to repeat than to study once and move on. C and C are more than welcome. Thanks.

eparts
May 24th, 2009, 06:47 AM
nice walktrough with the perspective tutorial :) those hand studies really makes a difference :) keep up the great sketching!

IMBass
June 15th, 2009, 12:27 AM
Lot going on lately. Lost my job. Looking for a new one. Haven't been working on art as much as I should.

Got into an Industrial Design class with VogelA. I'm excited about that. If I produce anything worth a crap in there I'll post it in here as well. If I am ever to get into the films and games industry I need to get to work. I'm being a lazy ass.

Anyway, here is a little bit more of the work I've done on Isaac Clarke from Dead Space.

IMBass
June 19th, 2009, 04:28 AM
-Dump

IMBass
July 17th, 2009, 06:30 PM
Got a job, looking for another. Moving to Seattle in September, at least that is the plan.

Dump...Bridgman, Kevin Chen studies and a WIP of a crab I started a while back from reference.