Feel the fear and draw faces anyway! Many beginner artists feel intimidated by drawing portraits - getting faces and anatomy in proportion can seem really difficult. But it doesn't have to be! This book alleviates all those anxieties by training the eye to look for simple forms first, and to use this foundation to free the artist to develop their portrait drawing skills.
Through the meticulously designed exercises and step-by-step tutorials in this book, internet art guru Satyajit Sinari - better known as SinArty - helps artists unlock their portrait drawing potential and create intricate artworks, starting from really simple shapes and building up to more advanced sketching and shading techniques, in graphite and charcoal pencil.
In this eye-opening and generous sharing of his personal techniques, SinArty explains that to be a good artist is to be a good critic of art. Understanding proportion and training the eye to spot mistakes is a crucial step in the process. This book teaches you how to critique your own art while drawing, as well as how to perfect your linework, pencil pressure, control and more. This comprehensive guide covers everything from how to hold the pencil to intermediate-level shading techniques to create contrast and depth in drawings.
Packed with easy-to-follow guidance, this unique book will help readers to become better artists and create a solid base to take into other genres besides portraits. With a focus on drawing from references rather than life, the tutorials include portraits of living subjects, drawings of sculptures, and human anatomy. The book also touches on composition and drawing from the imagination.
Start from simple shapes and watch your portrait drawing skills flourish with this fool-proof step-by-step guide.
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This really is the perfect guide for anyone struggling to get a reasonable likeness. The idea of working from block shapes to detailed outlines isnt new, of course, but Satayajit Sinari explains the process thoroughly and entirely comprehensibly. He follows this with short exercises that are based on people you will actually have heard of, so that you can judge both his and your results.
And thats about it. The explanations are clear, the reproduction every bit as sharp as youd want in order to be able to see all the marks and each demonstration features a different aspect of portrait drawing from expression to colouring, lighting and so on.
As I said, its not a new idea, but Ive rarely seen it as well executed as this.