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Frank J.Lohan

Wildlife Sketching

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  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    Parts of a bird’s leg. There is a definite angle unless the bird has its leg stretched.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    If you intend to develop your bird sketching abilities beyond casual diversion, you should eventually do a little research on the skeleton and major muscles of birds, how their feathers lie, and how their wings work.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    Note that to minimize the neck, I slightly overlapped the head and body circles.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    A crude bird sketch (no particular bird) developed from the arrangement of balls in .

    A larger head circle is used to prepare a sketch of a chickadee.

    The chickadee shape is drawn using the circles simply as guides, not as rigid outlines.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    For an excellent visual explanation of all perspective drawing principles, see Ernest Norling’s book, Perspective Drawing. It is number 29 in the famous Walter Foster art books series. Any art supply store that carries Walter Foster books can get it for you.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted15 days ago
    To estimate two-point perspective, all you have to remember is that one of the vanishing points is close to the subject and the other is farther away on the other side.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted16 days ago
    In this illustration the tops of the telephone poles are at his eye level, and since the horizon is also at his eye level, the tops of the poles appear to touch the horizon (). In this case everything is below the horizon and the horizon itself is moved upward in the frame.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted16 days ago
    The big difference this time is that the horizon would cross the telephone poles near the bottoms.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted16 days ago
    clarifies why the poles seem to get shorter with distance—it is because the angle to the artist’s eye is smaller if they are farther away.
  • Valeria Cristanchohas quoted16 days ago
    see the horizon at your eye level. The illusion of a high point of view or a low point of view comes only from observing where things lie in relation to the horizon. If you are up high, things tend to be lower in relation to the horizon; if you are down low, things will appear high relative to the horizon.
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