logo

Drawing Heads: Draw heads fast, at any angle. Methods I've used throughout my storyboarding career

feature icon

Self-paced course

Price

Rating

Overview

Drawing believable heads from any angle, and fast. That's what I had to learn to do as a storyboard artist working with directors on tv shows, movies and commercials. To do that you need to know your way around a head.

Heads are complicated. Easy to mess up. I needed a simple yet reliable breakdown of the main forms to get me most of the way to a believable head quickly. At least at the start. I kept on learning less immediately essential details in the meantime.

I needed something that worked from any angle so I wasn't stuck to a few positions. So the heads looked believable and the features were all in the right places every time.

The method I arrived at combined the teachings of George Bridgman, Andrew Loomis and John Watkiss. John I was fortunate to know personally as both a friend and mentor for many years before his tragically early death.

This class covers a method of quick construction to establish head positions, and placement of the features, quickly and reliably. Also an overview of the features with tips on their construction, a way to test yourself so you can improve quickly by making mistakes and becoming aware of them, muscles, expressions and so on.

A lot of years of learning on my part, condensed into a single class. Of course you'll need to keep working at improving over time and I can't cover every aspect in huge detail, but this class will show you how to get those heads blocked in so you can keep sketching in those scenes in the usual hurry!

What do you need?

Any drawing tool you like will do. A pencil works great! Or you can work digitally. Layers are needed for some lessons (self testing for example) so tracing paper if you are working traditionally.

Any old paper since you'll be practicing and making mistakes a lot. That's how you improve. So an eagerness to discover where your shortcoming lie is a must.

You need to be comfortable drawing 3 dimensional forms in perspective. Boxes, cylinders, triangular shapes, balls, ellipses, that sort of thing.

If you are comfortable with that, let's get started!

Similar courses

course image
Drawing Is Important: Develop a Sketchbook Habit in 30 Days
logo
Skillshare
course image
How to create Illustrated Characters using Procreate
logo
Skillshare
course image
Head Drawing Basics / Portrait Drawing & Illustration / Sketching Realistic Faces
logo
Skillshare
course image
Introduction to Sacred Geometry: Drawing the Vesica Piscis
logo
Skillshare
course image
Drawing Fundamentals 1: Basic Illustration Skills & Sketching Accurately
logo
Skillshare
course image
Key Principles for Making Outstanding Patterns
logo
Skillshare

Featured articles

Sep 12, 2022

WATCH these YouTube videos if you can't start learning a language

5

0
1
4K

Sep 12, 2022

How Memrise works + reviews [2022]

6

0
1
4K

Sep 12, 2022

5 tips to learn languages with YouTube videos [2022]

7

0
1
3K

Sep 12, 2022

How I Became a Marketing Manager at Microsoft

8

0
1
2K

Sep 24, 2022

How Edureka works + reviews [2022]

3

0
2
2K

Sep 27, 2022

How Codecademy works + reviews [2022]

3

0
2
2K
course image
feature icon

606 students

feature icon

English

feature icon

Beginner

Provided by

Authored by