Sorry that they are so big , I tried shrinking them in Photobucket but they still came out this big
The scales on this one took me ages! The smudge at the bottom has been removed now though...lol
This is the best Chinese dragon ive ever done! Took me nearly an hour to get the head right.
My most recent drawings!
- Wandering Dragon
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My most recent drawings!
Last edited by Blue Tiger on Mon Feb 11, 2008 6:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Godsin Queen
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yeah, I've found that the nose is particularly hard to do.
Now don't get me wrong I think your pics are awsome, but might I sugest a lot more shading. I know it might be scary especialy after all the time and effort you put into it, but sometimes you just have to go for it.
If it still seems too scary, print a copy of the scetch from the computer onto a piece of scetch paper and pratice your shading first.
If yur not sure how to go about it check out how famous artist shade their pictures. Study how they shade the muscle contures, and how they show the light hitting whatever their drawing.
Also when drawing the wings on a dragon it may help to study the wings on a bat since they're so similar. I know you can't just snatch a bat out of the air and take a look at it's wings, but most libraries have really good animal books with pictures to go by.
I hope I'm not sounding like an bleep.
Now don't get me wrong I think your pics are awsome, but might I sugest a lot more shading. I know it might be scary especialy after all the time and effort you put into it, but sometimes you just have to go for it.
If it still seems too scary, print a copy of the scetch from the computer onto a piece of scetch paper and pratice your shading first.
If yur not sure how to go about it check out how famous artist shade their pictures. Study how they shade the muscle contures, and how they show the light hitting whatever their drawing.
Also when drawing the wings on a dragon it may help to study the wings on a bat since they're so similar. I know you can't just snatch a bat out of the air and take a look at it's wings, but most libraries have really good animal books with pictures to go by.
I hope I'm not sounding like an bleep.
- Wandering Dragon
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- Silver sorceress
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- Location: on the back of a black dragon laughing as the world dies below me
can you see the jealousy of your skill etched across my face...if you cant trust me, it's there.
If you were to juggle a lion, and a house cat, the end result would look something like a tattered chunk of red fabric. The cat would scratch anything within reach, and the lion would just eat you. The lesson to learn? Make sure you eat your spinach.
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- Dragon's Egg
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- Godsin Queen
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see! yur too scared to do it!
but you know how much cooler it'd look if you just tried.
I tripple-dog-dare ya.
And I think the arms are ok, they fit the dragons they were put on. Showing off muscle isn't exactly the easiest thing to do, ya know. Most average everyday people can't do that good with stick people, and I'm not making this up.
constucktive critacisom ( excuse my spelling please) is always good, I agree, but without any advice to go with it it's just downing the artist.
If you do want to improve on those arms however, I think I know how to help.
It looks like yur useing the basic skelleton form to draw your pictures am i right? If so, make the circle for the shoulder slightly bigger than you useually would, the bigger the figure you put it on the bigger you should make it. The ovals for the forearm and the upper arm should be slightly more curved, but not so much they just look like humps. Always make sure you only make slight changes to the way you would normaly draw, that way it still looks natural. Last but not least the circles for the joints should stay about the same size as usual.
This next bit has nothing to do with yur drawing really but I think it's a good thing to remember when doing any art project. Sometimes imprefections are more beautiful than perfections could ever be. Like a rose thats slightly off-center.
but you know how much cooler it'd look if you just tried.
I tripple-dog-dare ya.
And I think the arms are ok, they fit the dragons they were put on. Showing off muscle isn't exactly the easiest thing to do, ya know. Most average everyday people can't do that good with stick people, and I'm not making this up.
constucktive critacisom ( excuse my spelling please) is always good, I agree, but without any advice to go with it it's just downing the artist.
If you do want to improve on those arms however, I think I know how to help.
It looks like yur useing the basic skelleton form to draw your pictures am i right? If so, make the circle for the shoulder slightly bigger than you useually would, the bigger the figure you put it on the bigger you should make it. The ovals for the forearm and the upper arm should be slightly more curved, but not so much they just look like humps. Always make sure you only make slight changes to the way you would normaly draw, that way it still looks natural. Last but not least the circles for the joints should stay about the same size as usual.
This next bit has nothing to do with yur drawing really but I think it's a good thing to remember when doing any art project. Sometimes imprefections are more beautiful than perfections could ever be. Like a rose thats slightly off-center.
- Wandering Dragon
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You are totally right Pandora, I do use the basic skelleton structure, I try to make the limbs look as real as possible, but they are very hard, I hate doing feet, and hands, soooo difficult!
I shaded every scale on the first dragon! Individually! Took me AGES, but the effect was great.
And your right about imperfections, ...suposedly Japanese (i think) when they make pots or anything, they will distort it if they think it looks too perfect, to make it more interesting!
I shaded every scale on the first dragon! Individually! Took me AGES, but the effect was great.
And your right about imperfections, ...suposedly Japanese (i think) when they make pots or anything, they will distort it if they think it looks too perfect, to make it more interesting!
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- Godsin Queen
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great! I'd love to see it!
and we have soemthing in common, I'm horrible with hands,feet,claws,ect.
getting the fingers or the toes just right drives me insane sometimes. I'm horrible at trees too, I just haven't figured out how branches work. Too, often I'm tempted to just do them pre-school style, with the trunk and the bushy top. lol
But, it's like the old saying goes,practice makes perfect. You'll never get better if you don't try.
That little saying has gotten me though a lot.
and we have soemthing in common, I'm horrible with hands,feet,claws,ect.
getting the fingers or the toes just right drives me insane sometimes. I'm horrible at trees too, I just haven't figured out how branches work. Too, often I'm tempted to just do them pre-school style, with the trunk and the bushy top. lol
But, it's like the old saying goes,practice makes perfect. You'll never get better if you don't try.
That little saying has gotten me though a lot.
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- Dragon's Egg
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- Wandering Dragon
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