@Havoc
Alright! I figured out how most of the snapping functions work now. The last three still elude me. For now. I also now have a blending brush for shading.
A lot of your lines in this look fairly wonky, I’m afraid. I assume you draw with a mouse? I realize tablets are expensive, but most art programs have vectoring tools of some kind. I recommend looking up where to find them and how to use them, as they make drawing clean lines much easier.
I can also see what straight lines there are have more dramatic angles to them, rather than gradual curves or anything like that. If this is a stylistic choice I can understand, but if you want your art to be somewhat more realistic then I would recommend more gradual, natural curves.
As @acres said, practice makes perfect. Look up references of things if you want to draw them accurately, as it always helps to have an idea of what something should look like in front of you when dealing with it.
@acres
I’m aware. But it’s not the only thing that helps. Getting your errors pointed out to you lets you be aware of your flaws so you can work on improving them. That’s what I think about it, at least.
My reaction to these joke images is like that of a bad pun. Funny, but I have to shake my head a bit.
How so?
Alright! I figured out how most of the snapping functions work now. The last three still elude me. For now. I also now have a blending brush for shading.
I’m using FireAlpaca btw.
Thanks! I’ll look into the vector tools.
Alright, critique time then.
A lot of your lines in this look fairly wonky, I’m afraid. I assume you draw with a mouse? I realize tablets are expensive, but most art programs have vectoring tools of some kind. I recommend looking up where to find them and how to use them, as they make drawing clean lines much easier.
I can also see what straight lines there are have more dramatic angles to them, rather than gradual curves or anything like that. If this is a stylistic choice I can understand, but if you want your art to be somewhat more realistic then I would recommend more gradual, natural curves.
As @acres said, practice makes perfect. Look up references of things if you want to draw them accurately, as it always helps to have an idea of what something should look like in front of you when dealing with it.
Oh, and also: You forgot the horn.
Edited
I know.
Didn’t say it was bad. Just commenting on the blockier look.
I’m aware. But it’s not the only thing that helps. Getting your errors pointed out to you lets you be aware of your flaws so you can work on improving them. That’s what I think about it, at least.
This is coming from a person who can’t draw a straight line with a ruler, but from what I’ve lurked the consensus is usually just keep drawing.
You can only improve.
@TheBridge
@Тпсс_
Thanks, but is there anything I could do to improve?
This is beautiful btw.
I had no doubts.
I think I’m getting better.
ahem