Monday, March 14, 2011

6th Post/Life Drawing


Feet, Feet, Feet!  Learning how to draw feet is similar to trying to draw a space ship, in my opinion.  Also, feet are a very strange and awkward shape, in comparison with the flow of the rest of the body.  Feet seem to be bulgy or stretched and stubby yet bony.  I think that drawing the plains of the foot has really helped me capture the general shape of the foot and that following each bone down to the tip of the toe has helped give the foot a realistic feeling, rather than having ‘sausage toes.’  I think that knowing where the bones are, knowing the shape of the bones, and knowing the size of the bones is becoming more critical and visible now that we are drawing feet.  It’s much easier to understand how to draw a foot once you understand which bones go where and which bones do what.  When I draw I have been ‘grouping’ the smaller four toes together and leaving the big toe on it’s own.  I think that by doing this I have given a more realistic sense to the foot because they do have different muscles and they also have that unordinary gap between the small toes and the big toe.  There is a definite space in-between the two.  I think I will be bringing an eraser to class from now on because so far this semester I have only carried my kneaded eraser along to class.  The kneaded eraser has always proved useful in my past drawing classes but I think that a white eraser will be much more beneficial for what needs to be done in my drawings.  I think that in the long run in will be a much easier and rewarding tool to my drawings.

1 comment:

  1. I can definitely see the resemblance between a foot and a spaceship.. they are awkward appendages if you ask me. They have so many planes and are just tricky to understand.

    definitely get an eraser.. I'd be in a lot of trouble if i didn't have mine (I erase ALOT).

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