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    • LauraA
      LauraA SVS OG @LauraA last edited by

      This post is deleted!
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      • LauraA
        LauraA SVS OG last edited by

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        • Gary Wilkinson
          Gary Wilkinson last edited by

          If you click the little cloud icon with the arrow pointing up then it should just upload your image straight to the forum page 🙂

          www.garywilkinsonart.com
          www.instagram.com/gwillustration/
          www.twitter.com/GWillustration

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          • LauraA
            LauraA SVS OG last edited by LauraA

            Whew! Thank you so much, Gary! And found the edit button too :-). So now I put the photo in. And the one below is where I started developing the "angel's eye view" in a Facebook cover size.

            0_1516188890481_Presepe as Facebook cover photo.jpg

            Chip Valecek 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Chip Valecek
              Chip Valecek SVS Team SVS OG @LauraA last edited by

              @lauraa i think you are on the right track. With the POV of the angel will you be able to get enough detail in the figures? I wonder with that if you will see most of the back of the figures vs the front. I think if the focal point should be on the figures then you would want to see more of the front of them. Out of your thumbnails I liked the bottom right. With that one you would still see the kid and it would be a front view of the figures.

              Looking forward to seeing the progress on this.


              https://www.instagram.com/chipvalecek/
              https://www.facebook.com/cvalecek
              http://www.cshellmedia.com/

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              • Gary Wilkinson
                Gary Wilkinson last edited by

                I would second Chip on the issue of giving the figures enough detail with that viewpoint. I would recommend that you have take a bunch of photos of someone in a similar setup to get a feel of what would work best. Your viewpoint will be very dependent on what the story is that you are going to tell. Is the person setting up the scene very important? If not, it might be good to have an over the shoulder shot, indicating that there is someone making the scene, but putting all the energy of the scene into the figures themselves.

                www.garywilkinsonart.com
                www.instagram.com/gwillustration/
                www.twitter.com/GWillustration

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                • LauraA
                  LauraA SVS OG last edited by LauraA

                  Thanks for your input, Chip and Gary. Actually, I just put the second person in the scene to balance out the sizes and values of objects in the scene. So no, that store employee is not currently important, though I did think that if I chose an option with a second figure, I might draw that person glancing at the child.

                  Yesterday I fiddled around with placing the figures in the "angel's eye" scene, and in the end, many of them are side (townspeople) or even frontal views (some shepherds and wise men). But the Holy Family themselves have their backs to the viewer and in fact, I currently don't like how they are just out there by themselves. Last night I started developing the bottom right view a bit as well, and though the figures on the back wall (mostly townspeople) would face the front, they would be farther away from the viewer. Many of the ones on the ground would still face the side.

                  So yeah, I guess I really need to decide what I am after. I really want to create a bit of a Baroque stage set with the possibility of developing some humorous aspects among the figures, but I also want the child's interest. Any adult reaction would be just a way to draw more attention to the child's. I just find something appealingly "Busy World of Richard Scarry" about nativity scenes, and to me it reflects something about town life in general.

                  I walked by the store that was my original inspiration for this scene, but they have now put away their figures! I only have photos that I took from outside the store. Meanwhile, I still have until February to photograph nativity scenes in churches, but no child model. If I can think through the space, though, I can figure out the child part.

                  I've also elongated the whole thing, which seems to allow for more figures, but also favors the angel's eye view. I'll think about these things today and post a drawing update when I've had time to develop them both further.

                  Thanks again. I hope I've understood what you were trying to say.

                  Miriam 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Miriam
                    Miriam @LauraA last edited by Miriam

                    @lauraa
                    What if you had the child holding some of the figures? That way, they could be facing upward if the child is holding them tilted back in their hands. I guess it would make them upside down in the picture (if you are looking down facing the child), but you could see if that works.

                    You could also try a side view looking down at the child (to avoid the upside down view).

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                    • Pam Boutilier
                      Pam Boutilier last edited by

                      I love your thumbs, I originally liked the upper left and lower right for clarity. Would there be any benefit to having two children, allowing you an angle that gives a more direct front-view of the nativity but instead of seeing the back of a single child looking at it, have two excited children interacting (looking at each other but pointing at the scene, etc)? Just a thought.

                      ~ Pam
                      www.PamBoutilier.com

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                      • demotlj
                        demotlj SVS OG last edited by

                        I have a friend who comes from an Italian family who always built elaborate "villages" under her Christmas tree with the nativity figure at the center. I thought it was just something she did -- I didn't know it came from her heritage. If you are having difficulty with the shop perspective, you could have the child looking at the scene under his/her tree. Whatever you do, it's a neat idea.

                        Laurie DeMott
                        instagram.com/demotlj

                        LauraA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • LauraA
                          LauraA SVS OG @demotlj last edited by

                          Thanks, guys! I just started the Turbocharging Your Creativity class and it's so relevant to this! So I think I'm going to proceed through the class and then "go back to the drawing board," so to speak, on this image.

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