

I dropped an example for that in the below. Secondly, draw the Loomis head but instead of using spheres, use boxes. This will help you to draw in perspective. And with that, draw boxes from any angle. Do this over and over again until you became comfortable about it. I have couple of exercise that you can do in a daily basis.įirst of all, draw a sphere, and think about that sphere has lines around of it. You have to develop your sense of 3D space, shapes and perspective drawing skills. And this important because in your drawing, you don't really give the sense of a 3D shape, it looks like a bunch of line floating in the air. Loomis head is basically a combination of a box and a sphere. Hey there! You are doing well for firt try. Hope they are of some help.ĭreux, nice work - I'd love to see more. I'm attaching a few drawn sheets of notes that illustrate what I'm trying to descried in words. I learned this bit from the comic book artist Joe Kubert. What I tend to do in addition is place an oval around the whole face-plate area which makes a similar side-plane curve as in Steves example. I get what he's pointing out but I tend to put that line in as you have because it better indicates the cheek bone running back to where it's connected with the jaw and where it scoops around the orbital bone around the eye socket. I would politely disagree with Steve's comment regarding the cheek bone rhythm line. There's one or two on your sheet where the brow and nose lines deviate from each other. One note: be careful to keep your division lines (brow, nose, mouth) in proper perspective with the angle and to each other. You seem capable of turning the form in space very well. Hi Dreux, these are looking pretty good - not flat at all.
