Kelly Mittendorf photographed by Ellen von Unwerth for Vogue Italia April 2012
(Source: spinningbirdkick, via crevan-grietje)
I have a new print ‘Pleiades’ available from Knee Deep in Sleep.
Edition of 50 -signed, embossed and supplied with a certificate of authenticity.
Printed on Hahnemühle PhotoRag 310gsm paper. 59 x 42 cm
Please click on the link or the image for further information. http://bit.ly/tLtw0H
Messy painting practice of my favorite D3 class! About 2.5 hours in SAI, no ref for the figure but I used this photo for palette inspiration.
(edit: fixed the link)
(via crevan-grietje)
Fantastic twist on an old classic. Have seen the original by Théophile Alexandre Steinlen in person at the Portland Art Museum.
(Source: mykindofneverland, via surfdog2000)
Weekend: relax reader / Fin de semana: relax lector (ilustración de Daryl Zang)
kelseyum asked you: On the topic of help posts, do you have any tips for drawing the head in profile? It’s something I struggle with pretty consistently; for some reason I just can’t understand it. Anything you could say on the subject would be extremely helpful for me! (sorry if this sends twice; tumblr is being super weird!)
Ok, I hope this is helpful! It helps to have a vague guideline/set of rules in mind, and this is what I generally thing of. When you’re drawing the skull in profile, you can basically draw it in a box and then divide it into four quadrants. The ear is located right in the middle; you can find other things from there. The eye generally lines up with the top of the ear, the nose usually comes from the middle of the eyes/pupil and goes down to about halfway through the quadrant it’s in. The edge of the jaw lines up with the ear. Obviously that’s a super rough guideline, but it can really help you out!
The biggest thing I think people have problems with is making sure you draw enough skull onto the back of the head. That’s why drawing a square helps - if you’re too far from the edge of the square, you don’t have enough skull for a brain, haha.
Once you have that in mind, you can build upon it! Not everyone will fall right into this pattern; some people might have really big ears or ears that are higher/lower, some people have big foreheads, some people have big noses. If you’re really stuck, Google some profiles and try and draw them with these guidelines; it’ll help you figure out what goes where!
*A* Hope that helps a bit!
(via lou0)
(Source: across-the-univ3rse, via miracleworker)


