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This blog is dedicated to the reblogging and cataloging of art protips. I hope you find it useful. Please send any protips my way if you have them.

Other Things

27 October 19

A tutorial on importing and animating sketchbook assets in Adobe After Effects by @AnAxeDraws

22 December 18

stringbing:

Animation smears lecture from Chapter 3 or FULL VERSION of my Complete Introduction to 2D Animation which you can find on https://gumroad.com/stringbing

Reblogged: thedrunkensatyr

21 December 18

art cheats

siderarum:

hello i am here today to not lose track of the art cheats i have discovered over the years. what i call art cheat is actually a cool filter/coloring style/way to shade/etc. that singlehandedly makes art like 20 times better

80’s anime style

glitch effect

glow effects

adding colors to grayscale paintings

foreshortening ( coil )

foreshortening ( perspective )

clipping group (lines)

clipping group (colors)

dramatic lighting ( GOOD )

shading metal

lighting faces

that is all for today, do stay tuned as i am always hunting for cool shit like this

Reblogged: nopuuu

Tags: Jackpot
3 December 18

About the new NSFW policy

Normally I am against “update” posts for this blog but something important has come up that simply must be addressed.

As of December 17th, NSFW content will no longer be allowed on tumblr.

Let me reassure you that Art Protips will not be going anywhere. This blog is PURELY for artistic educational resources. The only content on this blog that could be considered NSFW is artistic nudity.

As stated by the staff post above, “nudity found in art, such as sculptures and illustrations, are also stuff that can be freely posted on Tumblr.”

If, for some reason, this blog is taken down because of the new policy, I will personally do whatever I can to fight and appeal it.

You may now return to your scheduled tumbling.

-The Protipper

24 August 18

stanprokopenko:

How to Draw Legs – The Adductors

We’re done having fun with butts. This lesson isn’t as stinky, though it’s close. We’ll study the inner leg muscles – the adductors and sartorius.

They’re in the upper inner part of the leg. The inguinal ligament separates them from the abs, ASIS to pubic symphysis. The long sartorius muscle separates the adductors from the quads diagonally. The border in the back is not as obvious. It fades away into fat and then suddenly it’s the hamstrings. Though in certain poses and mostly on athletic people, you might see where the adductor magnus pops out at the top. It can separate the form of the adductors from the hamstrings.

image

This little section is called the femoral triangle and has nerves, veins, arteries, lymph nodes, and the adductor area in general is prone to having more fat. All this stuff softens the inner leg muscles. This is actually good news for us because in most cases we don’t need to know the individual adductor muscles, just their overall form and occasionally some tendons toward the top. In premium, we’ll go over the anatomy of each adductor in more details because sometime it can be useful.

image

So, let’s get familiar with the simple forms. You know I love simple forms…

Simple Forms

Up to this point in this course and the figure drawing course, we’ve been drawing leg’s as simple cylinders, maybe with a bit of taper, getting thinner toward the knee. And that’s fine for starting our drawings. But now, since we’re learning leg anatomy, we need to be able to take that cylinder and make it into… a leg!

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Let’s say we have this seated pose (see below), legs coming at us. Looking at a cross section, we’ll see three main muscle groups. Quadriceps, hamstrings, and adductors. This video is about adductors, so let’s group the quads and hamstrings into one large mass. Now, let’s look at how a leg is different from a cylinder.

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In the middle everything is very meaty. You start seeing that indent on the inside where the adductor group attaches to the quads. The front plane is tall and round as the quads project out.

Near the knee, the leg isn’t cylindrical at all. It’s more boxy. The top is meaty, with the quads, and the back is tendinous, with two powerful hamstring tendons on the sides. So, the corners of the box are sharper in the back. It’s like a slice of bread.

image

The main mass of the quads and hamstrings is boxy and short at the knee and grows much taller and egg-shaped at the hip. The adductors are like a secondary mass that attach on the inside, shaped like a cone or a wedge. You can see how it’s separate from the rest of the leg mass especially in a seated pose like this. The adductor mass hangs down off the leg. The long sartorius muscle actually rounds it out a bit. Without it, the indent between these two forms would be even sharper. Also keep in mind that this area is a major fat storage area. So, that adds to the form and softens the borders.

image

The sartorius is a great rhythm diagonally across the leg. You’ll see it as as an oblique side plane. So, when we look at it with Bridgman glasses, the quads are a front plane, the sartorius is a side plane, and then the adductors make a triangular front plane, and another side plane is they wrap around to the back. We have 2 “steps” when we think of the front of the leg planarly.

image

A Few Details

The sartorius and the TFL we learned about last time create a hollow triangle into which the quads dive in to. Sometimes you’ll see this as an indent, but usually just as a flat vertical plane. Remember that the leg cylinder doesn’t start at the ASIS point of the pelvis. We need to drop this vertical for the TFL and sartorius, and then start the leg cylinder a few inches down.

image

The inside of the leg gets this double curve. Look for that when you’re designing the flow down the leg. Remember how we talked about asymmetry in the limbs. The contours zig zag down the leg. Because female pelvises are wider, the adductor origins are farther apart. So thin females may have a “thigh gap”. Here’s a good example of it.

image

Like I said, the simple form is the most important thing to learn about the adductors. There’s just a few tendons that you’ll commonly see. Usually when the legs are spread apart, thinning out the fat and pulling the tendons tight. You’ll see the tendons of the adductor longus and adductor magnus.

Assignment

Your assignment is to do quicksketch drawings of the legs from the model photos I’ve provided in the description below. Start with the gesture then focus on drawing the forms of the muscle groups, especially the adductors. We haven’t studied the others yet, so you can keep them as gestural lines, or cylindrical. But don’t just copy the contours. In premium, I’ll show you how to draw all the assignment photos, so you can check your work.

Post your work in the Anatomy for Artists Facebook group.

Download Assignment Photos

Reblogged: sidheshit

14 August 18

stringbing:

Head rotation tips - recorded a demo for my upcoming Intro to 2D Animation Tutorial Package. I talk about flipping, tracking techniques and utilizing arcs to maintain solid drawing.

Reblogged: howdoyouanimate

Posted: 10:42 PM

stringbing:

Pose to Pose and Straight Ahead explanation, along with combo. Material coming soon for my upcoming 2D animation tutorial package.

Reblogged: howdoyouanimate

Tags: animation
1 August 18

Source

The Suspicious Anatomical Illustrations, “a guidebook that’s been passed down through the generations of the fighting game dev teams” at Capcom.

I will not lie, Capcom’s amazing spritework is what made me take up art. When I found this in lying the corner of the Capcom Fighting Network’s webpage, I had to share it.

19 July 18
the-thought-emporium-imperial:
“ miss-coverly:
“ typeandlettering:
“ Quick Tip to Draw Straight Lines & Avoid Shaky Hand Lettering by Sean McCabe
”
(reblog to save an artist
”
Of all the art classes I’ve taken, this is one the most helpful thing I’ve...

the-thought-emporium-imperial:

miss-coverly:

typeandlettering:

Quick Tip to Draw Straight Lines & Avoid Shaky Hand Lettering by Sean McCabe

(reblog to save an artist

Of all the art classes I’ve taken, this is one the most helpful thing I’ve ever learned.

Reblogged: ibe-poppingbottles

Posted: 7:58 PM
nalciel:
“ vinetrility:
“ gorgonzol-st:
“ 20170226
Drawing Study of February - Light and Shadow
”
Oooineedthis
”
OH. MY. GOD.
This is the ultimate reference! Thank you so much!!!
”

nalciel:

vinetrility:

gorgonzol-st:

20170226

Drawing Study of February - Light and Shadow

Oooineedthis

OH. MY. GOD.
This is the ultimate reference! Thank you so much!!!

Reblogged: ibe-poppingbottles

14 July 18
13 July 18

miyuliart:

Some pointers I keep in mind while drawing difficult angles.
Posted these on twitter last month.

Reblogged: drawthisshitt

1 July 18
28 June 18
16 May 18

dconthedancefloor:

image
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Found some hands tutorial by me

Not in English but hope it will help???????

Reblogged: thepiig

Tags: Arm Arms Hand Hands
Themed by Hunson. Originally by Josh