HERE HAVE A GARY AND JOHN đŁ
This was so much fun to draw! (For the love of god i need to practice to draw gary)
HERE THE GIRLIES AND THE BESTIES đŁ
And gary
(I forgot to post yesterday - big sad-)
Sum video games
Silly John doing silly thingsâ¨ď¸
(Just a little guy doing its best)
Hi! I want to draw people with a lot of emotion captured, but I don't really know how to do it so that the viewer feels something. I want to show more emotion, I guess? (This was really unclear, I know :0) Thank you so much!
What a great question, @everchangingotpsâ!
I think studying anatomy helps a lot. Facial muscles are a bit complex, and they move in different ways to make the frowns and smiles happen!
Hereâs a few great resources I found:
Human Anatomy Fundamentals, Mastering facial Expressions - super comprehensive. Definitely worth the read!
Muscles of Facial Expression - Anatomyzone
Drawing facial expressions  - Xia Taptara on YoutubeÂ
Folder of Facial Expression Tutorials!  Super useful
Expression tutorial by shingworks - cartoon styleÂ
If you liked this post, please consider reblogging this post so more artists can see it!Â
Also it would mean the world to me if you checked out my art at @astrikos!Â
Thank you for your continued support!Â
ideas of exercises to help with your practical art skills, as well as things to keep in mind while making art and new ways to find inspiration:
draw every day
recreate a drawing you did before, but better
draw something using only simple geometric shapes
do studies of famous artworks
listen to artists explain their work, itâs super interesting
take life drawing classes (or use online photo resources)
find an artwork you love, and work out why
draw caricatures of friends
set a 1 minute timer and draw an object as quickly as possible
draw something you canât see, eg. music, emotion
research artists you admire and find out how they work
think about composition: what stands out, what recedes etc.
find a famous artwork you hate and work out why
sit outside and draw the landscape
copy a photo exactly
draw a scene from a film
draw the contours of an object not the outline
visit an art exhibition near you
draw your bedroom
look up tutorials online - thereâs so many useful ones!
practise creating contrast between light and dark in pictures
research colour theory
do a self portrait
learn about art history! Research different movements etc.
try a new medium
consider the feeling you want to portray with the artwork
draw without looking at the page
draw a character from a book youâve read
draw something you donât usually draw
look at your pictures in the mirror to help you see problems better
follow artists and galleries on instagram for inspo
draw an ugly object in a beautiful way
try using only bold, bright colours
plan your colour palette before starting an artwork, and stick to it!
if you usually work in 2D, make something in 3D
always remember to add shadows
draw an object which is important to you
use 5 lines to depict an object, make every line count
draw using negative space
always draw from life when possible!
think carefully about which direction the light is coming from
study proportions and anatomy!!Â
draw your pet
research items symbolic meanings in art
make an art blog to compile images that inspire you
draw using only straight lines
try accentuating any subtle colours in an image
draw models from fashion websites
sketch with friends! They always have great ideas
keep drawing even if you find it hard, you improve with every mistake!
{my art masterpost might also be useful to you}Â
Good luck! xx
Friendly reminder that babes with clinical depression are awesome and I hope they have healthy ways to cope.
a lot of us are working from home now, pretty abruptly. itâs hard, and especially if youâre like me, a sudden lack of structure coupled with really harsh self-expectations/a tense or unforgiving temperament is really challenging.
i started working from home fulltime this year, and my stop it series is a set of doodled observations iâve made about the obstacles, bad habits, and unhealthy expectations iâve found myself running into as i adjust. i hope maybe they can be helpful to other people too!
please check out the linked tag bc i have further observations/clarifications on these in the captions of the individual posts, but i figured itâd be good to finally dump all the notes iâve made so far into one place.Â
and a final note on what iâve run into as i get used to working from home: it is a really really difficult balance for me, bc on one hand i really NEED a lot of self-discipline and productivity assists to get things done and make enough money to survive. but on the other hand, a loooooot of productivity advice/motivation/tools out there are really heavily keyed into capitalism and the concept of productivity as self-worth, and itâs easier than you think to slide into destructive thinking because youâre trying to keep yourself on track. do what you have to do, but make sure that the measures you take to try to make home employment work and get things done are always abt helping yourself do what you need to do without strife, not wringing as much work out of yourself as possible.
Still my favorite to watch and the detail⤠great!
 VS death
a 2 page story i did a while back. its a really random thing. hope you like the ephimeral comic.
Fuck, okay, so um,,,
followers,,,,,,
imagine your fictional crush looking at you like youâre their world. like, maybe itâs when youâre not looking. maybe youâre giving them a hug and theyâre just smiling like theyâve won the lottery.
maybe itâs when you two are just looking into each otherâs eyes, and theyâre just so lovestruck that they canât handle it.Â
thank you. thatâs been my announcement of the day.
Writing With Color â General Topics
A collection of WWC posts that deal with more general writing advice, character creation and diversity topics applicable to most marginalized people, particularly People of Color and some ethnic and religious groups.
Writing Characters of Color: The Generals
On âOverthinkingâ Writing Characters of Color
On White Authors âGetting it Rightâ
On White Writers Writing Characters of Color (I, II, III)
Researching PoC + Supporting Writers of ColorÂ
So You Want To Save The World From Bad Representation
Writing POC with Little Experience
Writing Authentically From Your Own Experiences
Useful Non-WWC Posts
Diversity Exists in the Real World by shiraglassman
How to Write WOC and MOC if you are White by kaylapocalypse
âI feel pressured to be inclusive in my writing!â by nimblesnotebookÂ
On White Fear & Creating Diverse Transformative Works by saathi1013
Diversity/Representation Topics
Diversity vs. Exploiting Cultures
Diversifying a Predominately-White Cast
On âDiversity Quotasâ
On Excluding Diversity Out of Fear
Different Heritage POVâs in a Story
Including Realistic Diversity Naturally
âNormalizingâ Protagonists of Color
Villains of Color
White-Dominant Rural Areas and Diversity
White Privilege, Publishing, and Diversity Quotas
Writing: Making Efforts in DiversityÂ
Character Creation
Character Creation: Culture or Character first?
Character Design and Assigning Race and Ethnicity
Charactersâ Races Added Last During DevelopmentÂ
Determining your Charactersâ Race and/or Ethnicity
More on Assigning Race after Writing
Characters of Color & Culture
A Discussion on Culture and Erasure
âCulturingâ Culturally-disengaged PoC
Characters of Color with âNo Cultureâ
Mixed Race + Disconnect from Culture
Stereotyped vs Nuanced & Audience Perception
Tradition and Culture vs. Stereotype
Western Neutral Characters
âWhitewashedâ Character of Color?
Fantasy & Coding
Defining Coding (& Islam-coded Fantasy)
Denoting Race in Fantasy Setting
Fantasy Races Based off of People of Color
Naming People and Places, Avoiding Explicit Coding
Racially-coding Aliens
Real Religions in a Fantasy World
Religion in Fiction & Fantasy
South Asian-Coded Fantasy Caste System
Whitewashing in a Fantasy Setting
Including Racism in Fantasy
World-building: A Fantasy World without Racism
Writing Sensitive and Controversial Topics
Do I Need Permission to Write About Marginalized People?
Writing a Genocide to which you have No Personal Connection
On Outsider-Written Stories About Issues Of Another Group
Outsider-Written Stories, Issues of other Groups, Speculative Situation
Writing about Prejudice between People of Color
Reclaiming negative, dehumanizing stereotypes outside the group
Representing yourself when âyourselfâ isnât white
Racism and Micro-AggressionsÂ
Everyday Racism, Friendship and White Allies
Incorporating Micro-Aggressions in Writing
Racist Characters +Â Including Racism in Stories Not âAboutâ Racism
The Pitfalls of Racist Character Redemption Arcs
PoC Educating White Privileged Friend (Context: Black Characters)
âWWC