I wanted to do some character and pose practice and not color (since that's what takes me the most time).
I think these came out pretty good...four inked characters in 2 hours (give or take, FA went down after I did the first 3 not allowing me to see a reference for ShibaYoshi for a while)... FalloutFox doesn't look the same as the rest because I had to scan him in gray scale due to the shading on his fur. I'm not entirely happy with the ShibaYoshi pose because it's kind of a go-to pose for babyfur artists I think...
Anyway...
Top left:
PinkHuskyPuppy
Top right:
FalloutFox
Bottom left:
Bodolf
Bottom Right
ShibaYoshiFuru
Thanks all for participating! The Bodolf thing is kind of an inside joke... ^_^;
I think these came out pretty good...four inked characters in 2 hours (give or take, FA went down after I did the first 3 not allowing me to see a reference for ShibaYoshi for a while)... FalloutFox doesn't look the same as the rest because I had to scan him in gray scale due to the shading on his fur. I'm not entirely happy with the ShibaYoshi pose because it's kind of a go-to pose for babyfur artists I think...
Anyway...
Top left:
PinkHuskyPuppyTop right:
FalloutFoxBottom left:
BodolfBottom Right
ShibaYoshiFuruThanks all for participating! The Bodolf thing is kind of an inside joke... ^_^;
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Baby fur
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 744 x 1008px
File Size 215.2 kB
Glad I got a laugh ...
Sure, you can color them if you like...that'd be great... I can't promise all the lines are connected making it easy to fuzzy select... Though, if you're going to color everyone's character, I'd ask that you stick to their color references ... ^_^;
Sure, you can color them if you like...that'd be great... I can't promise all the lines are connected making it easy to fuzzy select... Though, if you're going to color everyone's character, I'd ask that you stick to their color references ... ^_^;
Now, I'm gunna make assumptions about how you draw since ive never watched you make something,
so bear with me. >.>
the character in the bottom right corner, his right foot paw. Right now where it's at is actually okay
if your just glancing. But if you stare it looks off or floating. This is a perspective problem and can
be fixxed with two different adjustments. You could scrap the right foot and try making this exclusively
a side view by putting the second leg and foot behind the first.
or
finish the right leg itself and move his left arm to the other side of the left leg. This will give the torso
a more natural look because that's where your hand goes to steady yourself when you sit with your
legs spread and your torso turned slightly.
Alot of this can be avoided by sketching out the entire character first (no need for details and such,
just simple lines) to see where legs, arms, ect end up. This way you don't have to guess where limbs
go later on and also helps to check your perspective even before final lines go on. It also makes
clothing infinitely easier to fit onto a character.
Last lil tip, when your drawing positions, especially new ones, try them out in real life if you can. just sit
or stand and see where things end up. You'd be surprised at how much that has helped with my own
drawings and learning basic anatomy.
so bear with me. >.>
the character in the bottom right corner, his right foot paw. Right now where it's at is actually okay
if your just glancing. But if you stare it looks off or floating. This is a perspective problem and can
be fixxed with two different adjustments. You could scrap the right foot and try making this exclusively
a side view by putting the second leg and foot behind the first.
or
finish the right leg itself and move his left arm to the other side of the left leg. This will give the torso
a more natural look because that's where your hand goes to steady yourself when you sit with your
legs spread and your torso turned slightly.
Alot of this can be avoided by sketching out the entire character first (no need for details and such,
just simple lines) to see where legs, arms, ect end up. This way you don't have to guess where limbs
go later on and also helps to check your perspective even before final lines go on. It also makes
clothing infinitely easier to fit onto a character.
Last lil tip, when your drawing positions, especially new ones, try them out in real life if you can. just sit
or stand and see where things end up. You'd be surprised at how much that has helped with my own
drawings and learning basic anatomy.
FA+

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