
Construct the male torso in a v shape, define the mushroom waist, curved hips, and half-circle ribs; sketch hands, then shape legs with bigger thighs, a mid-line, and narrow ankles.
Apply shading techniques to render shadows under a lighted condition, using rapid stroke or slanted-pencil shading to create depth and form shadow on the right side.
Learn step-by-step methods for sketching the female body by proportioning the torso, shoulders, chest, hips, and limbs, using guiding lines and divisions similar to male anatomy.
Sketch a basic female body with slender, curved lines, emphasizing a less muscular form and smooth shoulders. Start with an oval head and a thin neck.
Explore shaping a female body using curved outlines and emphasis on eyes, nose, lips, neck, shoulders, and arms, with 2B pencil outlines and left-side shading for light from the right.
The course is about drawing lifelike pictures of male and female body effortlessly. In this course the Hobitute art guru explains the learners about the sketching of the body structures - both male and female - in a simple and effective way through step by step teaching mechanism. The learners are surely going to enjoy geometry behind the human anatomy, and get benefitted from this course. We have included all the topics that are required to be covered, to transform you into a realistic artist who could draw any Human Body. The course will help the learners to obtain a good grounding in the fundamental art principles, and various techniques that are vital in composing and finalizing beautiful, vibrant figure drawings and paintings.
The male body is different from that of the female body. The guru effortlessly helps the learners to understand the difference in the approach taken to draw and shade male and female bodies. The materials used to create the artwork are HB and 2B pencils, eraser, sharpener, Art paper. The course is structured in such a way that the learners can easily learn to construct a human body in a quick and efficient manner. Anatomy of Human body is a critical to the learners who wanted to pursue painting as a hobby or as a serious profession.