I watched Michael Hampton’s video over his gesture process and I could grasp the concepts but couldn’t put it into practice very well. Your technique combined with his concepts finally helped me break through this wall I was stuck behind.
People always talk about the basics but rarely mention details like asymmetrical dynamics. And that actually means a lot for the overall success. I hope. I mean there many things that I find like this, by accident, that actually change everything and turn upside down. Like the light uneven distribution per angle or line confidence or using the right brain the right way... I'll try this asymmetry, see how it works. Makes sense so far. Thanks for sharing!
I am happy you pointed that out 🤭I find his voice very beautifull and had to stop the video to marvel it for a few seconds. Anyway, this vid is amazing and I maked notes through it also! Fell inspired and I hope I wont burn out again soon 😅
gesture within an art piece can either make or break the whole composition. Im glad there are videos like this that breakdown these concepts for artists on all levels
Yes! I mention near the start that my figure drawing is heavily inspired by his methods, since I learned it from his UA-cam lectures and his book. He’s a fantastic resource!
The video was very helpful thank you so much... I have just one question, do we draw the line of action while practicing or not? I mean you showed the sense of action without the assistance of that line so I was wondering if that's the part of exercise or more like a personal preference?
When you’re first learning, take as much time as you need to practice until you get the hang of the style. Then you can start timing yourself for each pose you draw. For example, try drawing 3-5 poses a day for a week. Then if you feel like you’re getting the hang of it, try to finish 1 gesture drawing in 5 minutes. Pro tip: don’t edit the gesture drawing once your timer is up. This way, once you’ve completed a few more times drawings, you can visibly see the improvement overtime (it’s a great motivator) After a few weeks of this (you can practice other skills while you learn gesture btw), your goal should be to finish a pose in 2 minutes or less. Once you can do that, and it looks pretty decent, then you don’t really need to draw any faster unless you want to. If you want to improve further, try for under 1 minute or even 30 seconds. Hope this helps!
great video! I just wanted to ask that when drawing the arm, since you are using the humerus to draw the arm, anatomy wise are you leaving out the tricep? Just was curious for future reference if I wanted to use a gesture drawing and put full anatomy on it.
Great question! Generally when I draw gesture, I like to hint at anatomy but not outright draw it. Because of this I tend to avoid drawing the tricep as it’s not that important in drawing a gestural arm, as the upper arm is small and can be equated to a single cylinder in most gesture. The same reasoning applies to why you won’t see fleshed out quadriceps or hamstrings on the upper leg, but the lines I draw make the viewer assume that those features are there. If you’re looking to practice drawing detailed arms on top of gesture, that’s a fantastic exercise for placement and flexion of those muscles! However, avoid drawing those muscles into your gesture drawings as you’re making them. Gesture is about the energy of the pose, and detailed musculature tends to distract from that energy. Hope this helps!
@@StartManga this was super helpful I really do appreciate it! Im pretty new to drawing and having been attempting to learn gesture drawing for about a month and recently realized that Ive been focusing too much on the anatomy portions and it left my drawings a bit stiff although that wasn't always the case, so I plan on practicing using the info provided in the video, so seriously thank you!! if you don't mind me asking Im still a bit confused on the bands part. I get that it shows the shape and shows the direction but for example I figured that with a leg lifted up into the air at 25:25 the band would be facing upward because of the direction of the leg. Is there a specific way to know which side the curve should go on? Sorry if this is a silly question or a bit confusing but I really want to make sure Im understanding everything correctly.
If you’re asking about the lines that wrap around the thigh on that lifted leg, it depends on the orientation of the leg. If you were the draw the thigh as a cylinder, with one circular face of that cylinder at the knee and the other circular face being near the glute muscle, you can use that for reference of how your wrapping lines are positioned on the form, in this case the upper thigh. In this case, the wrapping line curves down because the knee is closer to us than the butt, so if you imagine that cylinder I mentioned, you can picture it tilted in such a way that the circular face near the knee is tilting towards us, meaning we would see more of it. In this position, that cylinder is in a position where you would draw the wrapping lines the way I have. I used reference images for each of those drawings, which is why I know how exactly that cylinder-thigh shape should be wrapped. If you’re drawing gesture from imagination, you could have that wrapping line oriented either way! It mostly depends on how exactly you want the pose oriented, and whether that pose if physically possible for the human body!
I finally found what I was looking for. You're a great teacher. Thank you so much.
man wtf i just stepped on gold, i have been needing this for such a long time
I watched Michael Hampton’s video over his gesture process and I could grasp the concepts but couldn’t put it into practice very well. Your technique combined with his concepts finally helped me break through this wall I was stuck behind.
People always talk about the basics but rarely mention details like asymmetrical dynamics. And that actually means a lot for the overall success. I hope. I mean there many things that I find like this, by accident, that actually change everything and turn upside down. Like the light uneven distribution per angle or line confidence or using the right brain the right way... I'll try this asymmetry, see how it works. Makes sense so far. Thanks for sharing!
First UA-cam video I actually took notes on that was required
Bro ive tried your gesture drawing awesome helping me hand in hand
Thank you for this! You explained everything very clearly. Super useful!
the way you break down the pose is super helpful man thank you
I was trynna finding a tutorial which covers everything bout manga for so long… Thanks man
Very helpful video on gesture drawing. Detailed and nice explanation 👌👌
This helped me improve so much, thank you
Wow you tutorial is very detailed and easy to understand I have been seeking for this type of video for Days now thank you very much ❤
Please bring more videos on gesture drawing
@StartManga, THANK YOU SO MUCH for this! I have been looking for someone to explain and break this down step by step like this for so long.
I'm late commenting but this is good stuff and I just purchased the Figure Drawing: Design and Invention book too. Thanks for the info.
I really like your voice it keeps me focused on the video. Also you kind of sound like lex luthor from supergirl
I am happy you pointed that out 🤭I find his voice very beautifull and had to stop the video to marvel it for a few seconds. Anyway, this vid is amazing and I maked notes through it also! Fell inspired and I hope I wont burn out again soon 😅
gesture within an art piece can either make or break the whole composition. Im glad there are videos like this that breakdown these concepts for artists on all levels
You have studied figure drawing from michael hampton havent you? I love his book in videos its a great process. Great video btw!
Yes! I mention near the start that my figure drawing is heavily inspired by his methods, since I learned it from his UA-cam lectures and his book. He’s a fantastic resource!
@@StartManga Oh sorry I was skimming through watching the drawings
Trying to learn from Hampton too. I just find some poses to be more difficult with his method (front facing and leaning forward).
@@DragonthornXagree
Fantastic video very helpfull
Great video, thank you so much😊
This is such a helpful video!! Thank you so much for explaining this in such a clear and easy way to understand!!
Amazing tutorial!
Really fantastic video, I found it so helpful!
very good info thx
first comment! nice video I just started learning to draw so it is a definitely good one.
That’s great! Gesture is perfect for beginners so hopefully the video helps!
Great stuff! Can't wait to see your channel grow.
Awesome stuff, really looking forward to the rest in the series
Thank you ❤
Michael Hampton approach
The video was very helpful thank you so much... I have just one question, do we draw the line of action while practicing or not? I mean you showed the sense of action without the assistance of that line so I was wondering if that's the part of exercise or more like a personal preference?
GESTURE: How to Master Dynamics of the Figure! - Manga Fundamentals
ty
Great video👍
🔥🔥🔥
Can you please post links to references that you used
This a gem!!
thank you!!
*spams the sub button*
Should I time myself when I try this?
When you’re first learning, take as much time as you need to practice until you get the hang of the style. Then you can start timing yourself for each pose you draw.
For example, try drawing 3-5 poses a day for a week. Then if you feel like you’re getting the hang of it, try to finish 1 gesture drawing in 5 minutes. Pro tip: don’t edit the gesture drawing once your timer is up. This way, once you’ve completed a few more times drawings, you can visibly see the improvement overtime (it’s a great motivator)
After a few weeks of this (you can practice other skills while you learn gesture btw), your goal should be to finish a pose in 2 minutes or less. Once you can do that, and it looks pretty decent, then you don’t really need to draw any faster unless you want to. If you want to improve further, try for under 1 minute or even 30 seconds.
Hope this helps!
@@StartMangathis does seem helpful, I’m just kinda confused on how to find the spine segments as well as where and how to place wrapping lines
great video! I just wanted to ask that when drawing the arm, since you are using the humerus to draw the arm, anatomy wise are you leaving out the tricep? Just was curious for future reference if I wanted to use a gesture drawing and put full anatomy on it.
Great question! Generally when I draw gesture, I like to hint at anatomy but not outright draw it. Because of this I tend to avoid drawing the tricep as it’s not that important in drawing a gestural arm, as the upper arm is small and can be equated to a single cylinder in most gesture. The same reasoning applies to why you won’t see fleshed out quadriceps or hamstrings on the upper leg, but the lines I draw make the viewer assume that those features are there.
If you’re looking to practice drawing detailed arms on top of gesture, that’s a fantastic exercise for placement and flexion of those muscles! However, avoid drawing those muscles into your gesture drawings as you’re making them. Gesture is about the energy of the pose, and detailed musculature tends to distract from that energy.
Hope this helps!
@@StartManga this was super helpful I really do appreciate it! Im pretty new to drawing and having been attempting to learn gesture drawing for about a month and recently realized that Ive been focusing too much on the anatomy portions and it left my drawings a bit stiff although that wasn't always the case, so I plan on practicing using the info provided in the video, so seriously thank you!! if you don't mind me asking Im still a bit confused on the bands part. I get that it shows the shape and shows the direction but for example I figured that with a leg lifted up into the air at 25:25 the band would be facing upward because of the direction of the leg. Is there a specific way to know which side the curve should go on? Sorry if this is a silly question or a bit confusing but I really want to make sure Im understanding everything correctly.
If you’re asking about the lines that wrap around the thigh on that lifted leg, it depends on the orientation of the leg. If you were the draw the thigh as a cylinder, with one circular face of that cylinder at the knee and the other circular face being near the glute muscle, you can use that for reference of how your wrapping lines are positioned on the form, in this case the upper thigh.
In this case, the wrapping line curves down because the knee is closer to us than the butt, so if you imagine that cylinder I mentioned, you can picture it tilted in such a way that the circular face near the knee is tilting towards us, meaning we would see more of it. In this position, that cylinder is in a position where you would draw the wrapping lines the way I have.
I used reference images for each of those drawings, which is why I know how exactly that cylinder-thigh shape should be wrapped. If you’re drawing gesture from imagination, you could have that wrapping line oriented either way! It mostly depends on how exactly you want the pose oriented, and whether that pose if physically possible for the human body!
I was wondering if you draw the humerus for the upper arm why the brachialis muscle is drawn?
Thank you. Much Better for everyone , including kids. Better than PROKO who is good, but often borderline porn/too mature/nude models.
Don’t chew gum during recording sessions
Im eating
If u could make videos shorter