My ArtFight: https://artfight.net/~AurionMagnus
My last fully rendered piece for the ArtFight 2022, and revenge against
dumstote
Was starting to get worried I might not make it in time, but aawww yeeee <3
Need more practice on bioluminesence scenes; it's one of my most favorite themes, and yet I'm so unpracticed.
Ranger © to himself
mewrei
Art © to me
aurion-magnus
My last fully rendered piece for the ArtFight 2022, and revenge against
dumstoteWas starting to get worried I might not make it in time, but aawww yeeee <3
Need more practice on bioluminesence scenes; it's one of my most favorite themes, and yet I'm so unpracticed.
Ranger © to himself
mewreiArt © to me
aurion-magnus
Category All / All
Species Wolf
Size 1280 x 720px
File Size 281.3 kB
Listed in Folders
How do you determine how your art is angled?? It adds so much perspective wise and I struggle with it so much. This looks like such a cool and calm place to be. Thanks for doing an artfight chain with me.
Going to be responding to this one late but definitely going to! The colors in this too <3
Going to be responding to this one late but definitely going to! The colors in this too <3
Mmmm, it depends on a few things.
For the most part, I tend to do angled pieces when I have just one character in the picture (like here), or if I have multiple characters but they're not fullbody (like this one: https://www.furaffinity.net/view/47958572/). I usually try to make the angles 'come from the corner' when it's a single-character piece, so that (hopefully) the eye will be drawn to a certain point. Like this one; I knew I wanted the tailmaw to be the main focus, so I made the angle and pose in a way that would accentuate that.
I also do angled poses when I want a picture to have a soft of...action feel to it? Like, even if you don't consciously thing about it, there is still a sense of 'something is happening', or, 'what are these characters thinking?'.
The easiest tip I can give you to doing angled pieces? Draw a character and background like you might normally do on a level angle....and then just rotate it slightly. You'd be surprised at how much doing something that simple can really change how the piece feels. I don't recommend it with everything though, cuz some pieces would look 'off' if you were start rotating it (like instances where a character is doing a really mundane task, or just standing in a simple pose, for example).
And yeeeee, I very much enjoyed the chain!! I was so very excited, even when I was tired, haha! If it's even possible next year, and you're up for it again, I'd totally love to do another one, but no pressure :>
For the most part, I tend to do angled pieces when I have just one character in the picture (like here), or if I have multiple characters but they're not fullbody (like this one: https://www.furaffinity.net/view/47958572/). I usually try to make the angles 'come from the corner' when it's a single-character piece, so that (hopefully) the eye will be drawn to a certain point. Like this one; I knew I wanted the tailmaw to be the main focus, so I made the angle and pose in a way that would accentuate that.
I also do angled poses when I want a picture to have a soft of...action feel to it? Like, even if you don't consciously thing about it, there is still a sense of 'something is happening', or, 'what are these characters thinking?'.
The easiest tip I can give you to doing angled pieces? Draw a character and background like you might normally do on a level angle....and then just rotate it slightly. You'd be surprised at how much doing something that simple can really change how the piece feels. I don't recommend it with everything though, cuz some pieces would look 'off' if you were start rotating it (like instances where a character is doing a really mundane task, or just standing in a simple pose, for example).
And yeeeee, I very much enjoyed the chain!! I was so very excited, even when I was tired, haha! If it's even possible next year, and you're up for it again, I'd totally love to do another one, but no pressure :>
FA+
Comments