So I was taking a look at the ImagineFX book and came across what they call "Industrial Design" Method of drawing the figure
I found it pretty easy to get behind compared to others so I was wondering what other books go more in depth about drawing anatomy this particular way or what other resources should I use to study
my interpretation.
Check out michael hampton and burne hogarth
>>3060455
ayy lmao
>>3060382
steve huston's book
>>3060455
why did I even bump this
>>3060536
Is there a pdf lying around?
>>3060455
lol
>>3060382
Can i have a link to that pdf, anon?
inf act, I would love to know more about this 3D sketching in Industrial design.
I remember seeing something similar to this done by Feng Zhu once
>>3060536
>this.
The man that made loomis seem like a deviant artist.
Can we get the download link to the pdf?
>>3060382
Hampton
>>3060478
>>3060543
>>3060600
>your art is shit and im too good to redline or post my work
classic ic. i guess this is what i get for posting on a such a shithole board.
another redpill for OP ic will have a fit about: all you need is loomis and tons of google images for reference and anatomy, and downloading more pdfs will just make you feel smarter.
>>3061082
I really dont like the way loomis explains shit honestly, this book was far more useful to me then loomis could ever be
That just looks like the way everyone draws figures from imagination desu. Not really a special method. You just take the actual anatomy and figure and simplify it into a 3D form you can draw from imagination. I guess Hampton would probably be the closest match but any book on construction or constructive anatomy would give you similar info. That FORCE dynamic anatomy book might also cover some similar stuff.
>>3061082
You don't need to be a good artist to be able to tell if it looks like shit but you do need to be decent to correct anyone.
Also, redlines do literally nothing for people who don't have a basic understanding of fundies, because all they'd get out of it is something to copy.