⋆˚.༄ I’ve been making a lot of twisted wonderland art lately, but I’m in other fandoms too like crk, demon slayer, sakamoto days, hsr, etc etc,.
Get to know me!
Art has been a part of me for the longest time and I can’t imagine myself without it!! Other than that, I looove the color pink (paired with yellow and/or green), salami, and my carmex. My birthday is 7-22 and I am a INFJ-T (or ISFP, it keeps changing…)
Feel free to chat with me or ask questions!
✮ ⋆ ˚。𖦹 ⋆。°✩
Boundaries + rules ᯓ★
⋆˚꩜。 : please DNI if you’re racist, homophobic, a proshipper, a pedophile, a groomer, use AI, harass me/my friends, or be an asshole in general (I will block you)
^ note that my conditions for blocking are the aforementioned + non-sharing yume’s who come up on my feed (I do not want that heat; I myself am a sharing yume, but will respect other’s preferences)
⋆˚꩜。 : I am okay with suggestive comments/art, but please don’t show me straight up NSFW. I am a minor and will immediately block and report you if you were to do this.
⋆˚꩜。 : If I say anything inappropriate or misleading, do not be afraid to call me out so I can correct my actions!!
I am no where near my tablet right now, nor am I a professional, but my usual process is to remember that the body isn’t rigid, but a collection of organic shapes.
The torso for example is a rice/bean bag in my mind, so there’s going to be folds/ wrinkles whenever they turn and twist.
Another thing I’ve found helpful when making sure my poses aren’t too stiff is that the shoulder and hip line are never parallel, and intersect at some point (I saw this tip in passing a long while ago).
I made this sketch on a paper plate so forgive me^^
The aforementioned logic can be applied to all body types!!
Other than that, I tend to focus on movement and balance, and looking at references is definitely a huge help!!
I would remember to ‘apply’ what you learned— think of it like a math problem: you learn the equation and do practice problems with the teacher, but when on a test, you have to apply what you learned from the practice. In this case, try different angles, perspectives, or body types.
I’m prolly forgetting a lot of things, and again, I want to clarify that this is my personal process and not professional advice. I am self taught, so most of the things I’ve learned are from logic and observation. I hope this is helpful!!
I am no where near my tablet right now, nor am I a professional, but my usual process is to remember that the body isn’t rigid, but a collection of organic shapes.
The torso for example is a rice/bean bag in my mind, so there’s going to be folds/ wrinkles whenever they turn and twist.
Another thing I’ve found helpful when making sure my poses aren’t too stiff is that the shoulder and hip line are never parallel, and intersect at some point (I saw this tip in passing a long while ago).
I made this sketch on a paper plate so forgive me^^
The aforementioned logic can be applied to all body types!!
Other than that, I tend to focus on movement and balance, and looking at references is definitely a huge help!!
I would remember to ‘apply’ what you learned— think of it like a math problem: you learn the equation and do practice problems with the teacher, but when on a test, you have to apply what you learned from the practice. In this case, try different angles, perspectives, or body types.
I’m prolly forgetting a lot of things, and again, I want to clarify that this is my personal process and not professional advice. I am self taught, so most of the things I’ve learned are from logic and observation. I hope this is helpful!!
Help I forgot to show but here’s one of the students for GAA
Shes’s shipped with a snoopsie-billet-blog’s oc and is in the engineering curriculum!! Twisted off of Clarice from Chip and dale <33 (this means I will make Chip and dale oc’s yeah)
She’s also a magicam model hehe
There’s also zahra but I wanna redesign her so y’all are gonna hafta wait :3