Just some tips from me!
Can’t tell you how much I wish I knew this a couple of years ago.
Reblogging for everyone who’s curious about how I animate.
Just some tips from me!
Can’t tell you how much I wish I knew this a couple of years ago.
Reblogging for everyone who’s curious about how I animate.
DIY Know Your Shoes Guide from Enerie here. My favorite shoes aren’t listed yet - Louis Heels which were popular in the 1920s. First seen at inspiration & realisation’s Facebook page.
DAVID OWL
IT’S DOCTOR “HOO”
AND ITS ANIMATED
OH MY GOD THE BOW TIE
A very unusual genetic color variation in white-tailed deer — rarer even than albinism — produces all-black offspring in that species which are known as “melanistic” or “melanic” deer.
reblogging because no, really, melanistic animals are real
(and cool)
Steve Hampton: Figure Drawing: Design and Invention.
I took one of his classes back when I went to art school and he’s an incredible professor and instructor. I’d advise people to look through his studies and even buy his book. It’s not necessarily how to draw correct anatomy but to know it while making it stylized. His class basically teaches the mechanics of the body while using imagination.
Seriously, I recommend anyone to attending one of his online workshops. It’s kind of pricey but much more affordable than what I paid. Then again I had my own benefits.
HNNNG THESE ARE ALL RIGHT IN THE FEELS MAN!!
Chest: Are your maternal/parental instincts strong?
I’d say yes. I can get very defensive of my friends to the point that I can be considered a very over-protective parent. I can also act quite “motherly” to my own mother (xD) and to women/men older than me :’D Hence why many people refer to me as “mother/mommy/mom”. Even in High School man. IT WAS MY NICKNAME.
Stomach: Do you feel confident in your body image?
I have times when I do and times when I don’t. Usually the “don’t” is brought on by single people who take it upon themselves to tell me to “exercise more” or “use a razor” (for reference you can look at this image). No comments on it but that was sent to me in a note. I’m going off-topic XD Of course they were only trying to be helpful but that made me all the more uncomfortable with who I was. So I have my ups and I have my downs when it comes to my body.
Heart: Are you in love? If so, does the one you love know?
Harghghufhfufufuffllll this is a hard one to answer. I can’t say yes and I can’t say no. Generally the ones I fall in love with are not real (ie. Bastion - yes my own character :’D I am madly in love with him help). I have yet to actually have a guy interested in me that I was interested in that actually fit into my standards (which are not that hard to meet to be honest, but finding a great Christian guy these days is very difficult it seems). In fact I can’t actually remember the last time I had legitimate feelings for someone. It’s been years since I had butterflies in my stomach.

… OH WELL I’M SURE THAT IT’S NORMAL.
felt like doing a tutorial thingy (what should I call these??) again! I think I’ll make a tag for these in case I do more. This time I’m gonna talk a little about how angles affect how clothing falls aaaand stuff. here we go…
Given: The first drawing of these three is how the clothing naturally wants to fall, how it is made to be shaped. Or, whichever pose you could take that will give the garment the least amount of creases.
- I’ll actually talk about the green first; this is a representation of the hip box, which itself is a representation/simplification of your whole pelvis area. You see how your legs and hip box oppose angles here. in almost all poses except standing straight, your hip box and legs will create a bent angle, which affects how clothes fall.
- The red/blue is the skirt (obvs), the red specifically is the ellipses of the top and bottom openings of the skirt. This skirt is very stiff material for the sake of this example, so notice how the two ellipses always match eachother. the top ellipse is where the skirt is actually attached to the body, so it’s the boss; the bottom ellipse will more or less do exactly what the top one does.
- here’s where the fact that the legs and hip box are at different angles becomes important. The top of the skirt is attached to the hip box, but the bottom ellipse is in the realm of the legs. The orange lampshade shape diagram there is a simplification of this. It is very much like if you were to tilt a lampshade. The side you are bending towards will hug the body and create creases. The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line.
It even works with pants, though as the bottom ellipse(s) gets farther away from the top there’s more room for the garment to get distorted by gravity, perspective, and bent knees and such. But with this last example you can really see how the side touching the legs really hugs the body underneath, whereas the other side hangs off of it in a straighter, crease-less line.
Dresses are a little different because their top ellipse is attached to your torso/ribcage mass rather than the hip box.
Much of the time you get the same result as with a skirt. However if the hip box and ribcage mass are opposed sideways rather than forward or backward, it becomes a little tougher:
You can see in the third drawing how a shirt and a skirt together would fall in opposite ways if your body is bent sideways. If the shirt is long, just like I mentioned above about the long pants, there is more distortion of this effect.
I’ll take what I said above, “The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line”, and add a bit to the end: “… until it hits something.” In the fourth drawing above, the garment is falling off the body in a straight line on the right side. If you lengthen the garment:
The straight side continues down as normal until it hits the leg and becomes the body-hugging side. in response to that, the body-hugging side from farther up becomes the straight side when it falls off the hip.
Aaand with that I think I’ll stop lol. I hope that wasn’t hard to understand. It’s easy to do yourself, just wear a skirt or some loose pajama pants and take hula poses in the mirror lol.
For all of you who have been longing for ME to make a tutorial about clothes, I truly recommend you to read this post. Since it covers the area in clothing that many other tutorials never mention, clothing is more than just “drawing folds and wrinkles”, it’s about knowing how the design and the behavior of our bodies affect it.
So yeah.
Read this. Please. It’s so easy explained.
Get on my blog, useful information.