The Nigerian Mvies

The Nigerian Mvies
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Sunday 5 August 2012

Realistic Pencil Portrait Mastery: Master the Art of Drawing the Face

By Chuck Taylor


It seems like the holy grail of rough drawing or sketching is drawing breath taking portraits. Using simple tools, you will learn you can draw faces in a step by step fashion in this pencil portrait tutorial below.

Before now, it has been difficult for many to attain a high skill level of mastery in a relatively short span of time. Luckily, it is now possible to learn these skills easier and faster by learning how to draw faces step by step and learning the dynamics of each facial feature individually.

Firstly, you must analyze the different parts of the human face to be drawn. When you separate the various characteristics and sketch them individually, you will learn to draw at a faster pace. You should only focus on one element at a time so that your comprehension and understanding of crucial points increases. On several sheets of paper, draw very large eyes, noses, etc. You will understand the concept of how they exist and feel how they move. Draw only one nose, mouth and pair of eyes on a page and leave sufficient room for details.

Next, organize all the prepared drawings. Put the facial characteristics in realistic distances, positioning them in proportion to one another to accurately form a bigger picture.

There are several guidelines for how to put the features in the right places. The eyes should be directly halfway between the chin and the top of the head. This is one of the most essential lessons to learn about sketching good portraits. A lot of people make a habit of putting the eyes too high making the temple appear broad. It appears that some visual or optical illusion makes people believe that the eyes are placed higher than they really are.

Another error people make is when they place the eyes on the left or right. Make sure enough room is available for another eye to fit exactly into the space between the two eyes. Thus, the space in the middle of the two eyes and the edge of the face should be large enough for another eye.

Also, the bottom part of the nose is midway between the chin and the eyes. The space between the eyes and eyebrows is the same eye level. Midway between the nose and the chin is the mouth.

The top of the ears starts precisely at the eyebrows and the bottom of the ear may possibly align with the bottom part of the nose. These calculations may be different for each portrait as each person has different sized features.

If you follow these step by step guidelines, you should be able to accurately position the facial characteristics. Please be aware that these are only ideal positions and policies. In real life, measurements may vary slightly. This slight variation is what causes the uniqueness of each human face.




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