The Moment Before Perspective
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@Sliproot Not too late at all! I’m glad you mentioned the runners tilting more to the right as they go down the line. I thought that would be the case, but didn’t have the right reference to be sure. So basically I should see much more of the right side of runner 1 than runner 4, is that right? It should almost trick the eye, so that runner 1 looks like they are facing the viewer a little more than the others?
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Ok, I have drawn out all of the perspective lines and cubes, does this look better? I have not adjusted the body configurations to fit the boxes properly just yet, I will do that when I know that I’ve got this right.
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@ErinCortese Yep! Spot on!
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@ErinCortese
Sorry just one more thing.
So in order to get your 'cubes' the same size in perspective you can draw a grid like I have below.
The top image is the front of the squares and how to measure them. So you want to get the centre of the first square, then draw a horizontal centre line through them all. Then you draw a line from the corner of the first square down THROUGH the centre line that intersects with the other side down to the bottom. Where that touches is where your next square will begin.Sorry for the terrible explanation. But I hope it helps.
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@Sliproot Thanks, I think I’m going to have to watch the “How to Draw Everything” video again. I remember this, but it’s a little foggy.
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@Sliproot It was the “Mastering Perspective” video, not the one I mentioned above. Below is what I ended up with. It looks like the head positions are still ok, but I will need to adjust the bodies, which are a mess anyway. Look better?
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This is very courageous and I hope things work out, unfortunately I can’t aid you at this point.
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Wow, this isn't my post but I'm learning so much! I love how people on this forum take time to help others out. Very inspirational!
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@ErinCortese That looks a lot better! I think your lane lines are just a bit off on the second line from the front and each one behind it. It's not much, but that tiny bit makes the last lane look really crunched.
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Hi. I just noticed this now so thought I'd mention something I just watched. There was something in the "Mastering Perspective" class that said that if every figure you want to portray is roughly the same size in real life, then they will each hit the horizon line at about the same point in their body, otherwise your figures will look like they are smaller, rather than just receding into space. I notice that your horizon line is drawn skewed up above. I don't know enough about forced perspective to know what happens to the horizon line in this situation, but my gut says the horizon line always stays parallel to the picture plane? (Notice that @sliproot's example shows it this way) Good luck!
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@suenaumi Hmmm I didn’t think of that. Ugh there is so much to consider. Once I have the characters drawn I will rework the line up. Thanks!
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Have you thought about 1 point perspective? Just because some of the photos the vanishing point is so extreme you can get away with 1 point.
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@Aleksey That was my original idea, and I wish I would have gone with that. I thought this perspective would create higher tension, but it’s just not working out.
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Well I think it’s time to call this one, it’s just not working out. Not only am I still struggling with perspective, I’m also struggling with characters. This composition would be all about the characters, and I just don’t have enough experience designing them.
I’m also uninspired by the idea, which may be the biggest problem of all. For whatever reason, the thought of illustrating characters before a race just doesn’t interest me. I tried to push the idea considering adding jet packs, having the racers be elderly, or animals ....nothing.
Thank you guys for all your help! It sucks that it didn’t work out, but I think it’s just part of the process.
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Fair enough
There's nothing worse than being uninspired. My suggestion would be to try something wacky like jetpacks, but you already thought of that :smiling_face_with_open_mouth_cold_sweat:
If I were to try and make this more interesting and fun to illustrate (If I were illustrating it) I'd try writing a short story to go along with it. The quickest one I came up with is that someone' trying to cheat. Getting a friend to tie a racer's shoelaces together or something. Just so that you could try and push through to finish anyways (finishing when you don't wanna finish is a skill just like any other
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But then again, you know you. Sometimes it's best to cut our losses.
Will you be trying another idea for this month's prompt?
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@ErinCortese Sometimes this happens and many of those times the project the results from it turns out way better! Ok, I don't have stats to back that up but it sounds good, right? The key, I think, is that you became uninterested and it was no longer fun. The good news is that time isn't up yet and you might still find a theme and composition that you can get invested in and have fun with. I like the twists you were trying to add with jetpacks, elderly racers, and animals. Maybe you just need something wacky thrown in there. Maybe a grumpy curmudgeon with a jetpack chasing a rabbit who's been stealing all his carrots and it turns into this epic Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner escapade! Anyways, I hope you figure out an image that will keep you motivated even if it's just to keep the creativity flowing.
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I would suggest maybe you were too ambitious - maybe a race between two -recalling the tortoise and the hare -I know you thought about animals.
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@Jon-Anderson Haha, your comment made me laugh! Thanks for the positive reinforcement, even if there are no stats to back up that perspective
, it does sound good. I am feeling under the weather today, maybe I will give it one last effort tomorrow.
@Braden-Hallett I’m not sure yet if I will try something else for this prompt or not. I will give this one more effort and then see how I feel. The problem is that I tend to work slow, and I feel like time is running out pretty quick. I am amazed at the level and amount of work you are able to put out, I’m hoping I will speed up with a little more practice.