
☆ rin ☆ they/them ☆ 24 ☆ | yo, i barely finish any of the art here or post | this is my main account - side account: @dragondoge |
699 posts
Tiny Bluets For A Long Day




tiny bluets for a long day
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jhpba liked this · 1 year ago
More Posts from Xrinsu


birb! i believe this is a song sparrow..
im trying image ids under the read more cut
[ image ID: Two photos of a brown, grey, and black bird that has a white, speckled chest, grey beak, and pink legs perching on a wooden fence, with a grey and green background. On each picture is a grey watermark in the bottom left corner reading “xrinsu 2022″. In the first picture, the bird is hunched over on the back half of the fence, facing to the left. In the second picture, the bird is upright, on the front half of the fence, and facing to the right. end ID]


You can print things at 150dpi but anything lower than that comes out pixellated.
300dpi is the minimum setting I use for drawing digital and printing from digital. The higher the pixels per inch the better the print is. It applies to scans too! Scan at 300dpi minimum.
Hope this helps!


rinsu body sketch weee... gave them top scars!! love and peace
doodle is her drinking the juice (its blood)
will id later.
How I Study Anatomy
Everyone says NEVER TRACE!! THAT'S ART THEFT! Ok but we can do a little crime in the name of Learning.
Trace to learn, not to earn.
I like to take my own photos, but you can study whatever you want. Link back to original photos, and don't post copied artwork unless the artist is dead, cool with it, or both.
As always with learning, start every sketch with the intent to throw it away (trash for paper, quitting without saving for digital) This takes the pressure off and lets you make Bad Art, which is very important.
So let's make Bad Art of a Deer because I happen to have one handy
Start with a photo of your subject in a nice/neutral pose with all four feet visible. (so not like me)

Freehand copy it. Try not to stylize, focusing instead of matching proportions and pose. Don't get too detailed!

It's ok if your art looks terrible and has broken legs. I've drawn LOTS of deer so I have a leg up. Everyone's art sucks in their own eyes and here's where mine went wrong:
Either lasso-distort (recommended for beginners) or redraw a copy of your first sketch with your reference behind it (scaled to match the main body of your sketch)
Put the original and modified sketches together and compare the differences. Write it down if you want. This shows you where your eyes saw things the wrong size, so you can correct for that next time.

After learning about both deer and yourself, try freehand copying again.

Marvel at your newfound knowledge and skill!
but there's always room for improvement

You can stop here and move on to your real drawing, Or do another freehand-fix-compare cycle. I actually overcorrected my "draws heads too big" and veered into "heads too small."


Another note on tracing: Learning HOW to trace is more important than anything you could learn By tracing. Draw the Anatomy, not the outline. In real life, things don't have outlines, they have bones.

These are from the same shoot which is extra useful for consistency. The lines are minimal and follow where the animals joints are, and only important parts are drawn.
You won't know what Important Parts means right off the bat, which is where in-depth study comes in. You need to do learn the hard parts to do the easy parts right.
Next up: how to study bones and muscles.

oh fuck i never posted this. is my fave piece i did like early-mid semester