"Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
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Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
Thanks for the reply. Do you have any more current examples of a drawing and a reference pic? I struggle with how to interpret the fur texture from the photo to the drawing. Can you explain this? I see from your video Riley that you break down the hair into sections. Any way to show what you are looking at in the photo and then how you draw the hair in that section? Could you post pic of section of hair and then how you would draw it. That would be really helpful.
- Mike Sibley
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Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
I've nothing available right now - but you'll find some samples within the videos. DRAWING HAIR is high on my list of videos, as is the associated NEGATIVE DRAWING.kymchambers wrote: ↑Mon Dec 09, 2019 11:30 am Any way to show what you are looking at in the photo and then how you draw the hair in that section? Could you post pic of section of hair and then how you would draw it. That would be really helpful.
Quick clue: Pencil marks very rarely represent hairs. What you draw is the shadows between the hairs. That's how we visually detect the edges. And if you draw actual hairs, you're drawing dark lines against a light background - which is the reverse of what naturally occurs.
I have one video to complete (this week, if all goes to plan) then one more to complete the Basic Techniques series. I'm not certain if HAIR will be next but it's very high on the list.
In the meantime, take a look at the three "Divide" videos, because that concept is at the heart of drawing hair - or anything else, especially if it has some complexity:
DIVIDE AND CONQUER
DIVIDE LINE AND TONE
DIVIDE TO CONTROL
Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
Hi Mike, what size did you draw this and your other head studies at? I often wonder if I'd find it easier to achieve the detail at a larger size, (definitely longer!) I nearly always draw at A4 which I'm sure is a lot smaller than these?
It's simply stunning and in no way stagnant, though I can appreciate it may have felt that way after 110 hours!
It's simply stunning and in no way stagnant, though I can appreciate it may have felt that way after 110 hours!
- Mike Sibley
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Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
They're all almost A3, Marie. The actual image is usually around 9" × 12" (23 × 30.5 cm) with the paper size being 11" × 16" (30 x 40cm). Actually the paper was larger than that; that's the finished print size. I like to give myself plenty of spare space around an image, in case I decide to enlarge it in some way - although that applies to scenic drawings rather than head-studies.
I've often drawn smaller but very rarely bigger. It's easily forgotten that if you double the size you quadruple the area and time required. In fact, you often need eight times the time, because the detail expands too.
I thoroughly enjoyed working on this drawing. But that's partly because I knew it would be the last head-study at that scale. It wasn't the act of drawing that I was tired of, it was the fact that I'd learned all I could from working at that scale. Once I moved to creating the scenic studies I was setting myself challenges again, and I was enjoying it as much as I ever did. I think every drawing from that point onward contains something I'd never drawn before, and had little idea of how to draw itIt's simply stunning and in no way stagnant, though I can appreciate it may have felt that way after 110 hours!
I also had a "Plan B", just in case...
For example, I drew the water in the last two days of this drawing. I'd not drawn water before, and if it had failed it was destined to become grass
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Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
Hi Mike - I know this is an older post but I would LOVE to see the video you made - and no worries about the state of your hands! In fact - it makes it all real . So please do post that video! Waiting ..waiting with bated breath )))))
I wear many hats in my life but the one constant is my love for animals and being surrounded by the wonder of nature and earth's beauty. My art is central to my way of expressing my deep and abiding reverence for our Planet.
- Mike Sibley
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Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
Are you referring to the Riley video? I posted it here recently...
There isn't any narration, just 20 minutes of me drawing Riley. And I was learning to video, so it improves about half-way through
Head over here: RILEY or go directly to the video
There isn't any narration, just 20 minutes of me drawing Riley. And I was learning to video, so it improves about half-way through
Head over here: RILEY or go directly to the video
Re: "Bulldog" by Mike Sibley
Nice drawing indeed Mike.
Lovely/ugly face of the English Bulldog
Sorry for the "ugly", but this is how I can see this breed, lol
They're ugly - therefore they're beautiful
I love this breed very much, because its "blood" had a great role creating many of great breeds...
Beautiful portraiture Mike.
Lovely/ugly face of the English Bulldog
Sorry for the "ugly", but this is how I can see this breed, lol
They're ugly - therefore they're beautiful
I love this breed very much, because its "blood" had a great role creating many of great breeds...
Beautiful portraiture Mike.
*History isn't there for You to like or dislike. It's there for You to learn from it. And if it offends you, even better. Because then You are less likely to repeat it. It's not yours to erase - It belongs to all of us...*