The only thing, and this is really bugging me after spending a month doing ONLY perspective drawings, is that the legs on the chair don't match up with the angle we're viewing Jeeves, or the apparent slant of the floor according to horizon lines.
The shorter legs need to be on the RIGHT of the longer legs, because of the angle of the chair, which we can see from the back, just above Jeeves's shoulders. THe way the legs are now, the chair ought to be facing in the other direction.
Perspective is tough, I'm told, for those who weren't forced to practice is for four hours a day, twice a week, for four weeks, plus eight hours of homework on it each week. (No, I'm not bitter, why?)
I wish I could draw people as awesomely as you, so it all works out, right? ;)
no subject
The only thing, and this is really bugging me after spending a month doing ONLY perspective drawings, is that the legs on the chair don't match up with the angle we're viewing Jeeves, or the apparent slant of the floor according to horizon lines.
The shorter legs need to be on the RIGHT of the longer legs, because of the angle of the chair, which we can see from the back, just above Jeeves's shoulders. THe way the legs are now, the chair ought to be facing in the other direction.
Perspective is tough, I'm told, for those who weren't forced to practice is for four hours a day, twice a week, for four weeks, plus eight hours of homework on it each week. (No, I'm not bitter, why?)
I wish I could draw people as awesomely as you, so it all works out, right? ;)