3dtotal creates a wide range of educational and inspirational resources for artists, including high-quality art books, a quarterly character design magazine, and anatomy reference figures.
In this first lecture of a series focusing on human anatomy as it relates to figurative art, figure painter and instructor Charles Hu discusses key skeletal and muscular landmarks along with methods for maintaining the correct proportional relationships between the various structures of the human body. Throughout the lecture, Charles refers to skeletal reference to illustrate how skeletal elements not only connect, but more importantly, how these structures move in relation to one another, providing a clear roadmap for maintaining correct proportional relationships in your figure drawings. Charles begins with an initial "mechanical" representation of the human form from the front view. He first discusses the basic proportions and structures of the human head. As the human head is often used as the base unit of measurement in figure drawing, the important landmarks and relationships between the brow region, eye sockets, cheek bones, nose, mouth and chin will be explored in great detail. After blocking in the head, the neck and shoulder area is discussed before moving down to the chest, stomach and pelvis regions. Again, key structural landmarks are discussed in order to understand the anatomical, structural, and proportional importance of each. Charles then moves on to discuss arms and legs, along with correct proportional guides for laying in key elements like elbows, wrists, knees and ankles. Once completed with the anatomical sketch from the front view, he moves onto the drawings from both the back and side views, providing a clear and comprehensive study of the base human form. Suitable for all artists developing their understanding of the figure and its complex anatomical relationships, this lecture and demonstration is an immersive and critical foundation.
The Ultimate List of 1001 Character Traits: Positive, Negative, Personality, Character Flaws, You Name It! | CharacterHub
Master character traits! Explore positive, negative, and neutral personality traits with examples from a 1001-trait list for inspiration and easy OC development!
The tone word you need for the moment is the one that evokes the right emotions and that allows your sentence to flow without speed bumps. Use our ultimate list of 175 tone words.
80 Positive And Negative Character Traits With Simple Definitions - Visual Thinking Classroom
My favourite list of character traits for literary analysis. Get definitions for 80 positive and negative character traits that you can teach your students.
“Hey Guys, What Map Program Should I Use?” A Flowchart (of sorts)Note: This document used to be open for comments and suggestions, but I got a large volume of basically nonsense edits that seem to have been misclicks, and had to reject so many of them that it seems google interpreted all the re...
Storyboarder - The best and easiest way to storyboard.
Storyboarder makes it easy to visualize a story as fast you can draw stick figures. Quickly draw to test if a story idea works. Create and show animatics to others. Express your story idea without mak