chuwenjie:

A compilation of stuff I know about drawing Asian faces and Asian culture! I feel like many “How-To-Draw” tutorials often default to European faces and are not really helpful when drawing people of other races. So I thought I’d put this together in case anyone is interested! Feel free to share this guide and shoot me questions if you have any! I’m by no means an expert, I just know a few things from drawing experience and from my own cultural background. 

quick tutorial on clothing folds for people with no idea how to draw clothing folds

atalana:

so if, like me, you’ve done all the research on how clothing folds, and you have a decent idea how the physics works, but you just can’t get it to look right?

change all your lines into this

im serious

it makes everything look so much more natural

for added realism, just add random bumps to the line wherever you put one

and there you go!

(please dont judge me for my anatomy i drew this in five minutes)

Hello, if you have the time, could you explain how hair lines work?? specifically on men because I am struggling :-(

tf2humbug:

Well, I can give you some tips based on how I do it. Your mileage may vary.

I mainly figure out where my dudes’ hairlines are supposed to be based on the physical landmarks of the head. Here’s a generic head I drew up that highlights those parts. It’s not realistically accurate since these are TF2-ish proportions, but it does involve knowledge of actual anatomy, which isn’t as scary as it sounds.

image

1-3 are self-explanatory. 4 is that slight bony ridge around that little depressed area behind your forehead on the sides. 5 is the bump of the base of your skull where it meets your neck muscle.

Also, notice where things line up, since these are clues to help you lock things in place and keep facial features from floating around too much. For example, the top of the ear generally lines up with the eyeline and the bottom with the mouth. There are lots of little tricks like that.

And here’s a generic hairline based on these landmarks.

image

Of course, reference is also going to help you out a bunch here. The above approximation is just meant to give a basic idea of where a hairline would be. Like fingerprints, everyone’s hairline is unique. Depending on your character, you should feel free to mix it up!

image

These are just a few slight variations, to give you an idea of what I mean: rounded, pointy, and receding. Once I have my hairline roughed in, I pick where the hair part is (if there is one) and sketch in the hair, following the natural growth pattern of hair.

image

You can get nearly infinite variations! Get wacky with it! And there’s no one 100% correct way to draw a hairline (or anything else, for that matter) so don’t get too hung up on not doing it wrong. Practice until you’re comfortable, and you’ll be winging it in no time.

A conversation I had with my dad today

Me: Dad! Did you know there are around 57 different ways to say “apple core” in German?
Dad: Um, no I did not know that… Do YOU know what “doppelgänger” means?
Me: It means someone who looks exactly like you, right?
Dad: Actually, it means an evil identical twin from another dimension.
Me: WHAT!?!?
Dad: Yeah! What I want to know is how often does this happen in Germany for there to be a word for it!
Me: *Howling like a hyena and almost fallen onto the floor* XD

the-glass-sciencers:

sparkling-failure:

objectoffascination:

taylakrueger:

the-friendly-faith-plate:

thewolfbroughtindoors:

ughfandamned:

chinese-pizza:

communistbakery:

fit-fuel-injected:

official-sciencesideoftumbler:

thatmlc:

queenofcorgis:

opal-porn:

Ethiopian opal geode

egg

egg

Egg

Egg

egg

egg

Ethiopian opal geode

Thats clearly an egg

egg

The first and only thing I thought when I saw this was “Egg”

Egg

@the-glass-sciencers

Egg

Rock that looks like an egg rock: The rock that looks like an egg

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