13390 / 19138
Oct 2022

Kim Jung Gi always blew my mind. I genuinely think his brain works drastically different than most people and his ability to visualize with such perfection is just almost inhuman. Really crazy stuff.

Yeah, to be honest I don't use vanishing points very often. At least not in the normal sense. Usually I'll place a sort of 'main' object in the scene, like a big shelf I want to have as a sort of focal point, and then draw lines from that to create my grid. But I'll still change it up a bit and add in more objects with varying rotation to them. If I just use vanishing points from the start I always feel like there's this uncanny valley sort of feel to scene, where things are too symmetrical, if that makes sense.

There is condition called being"walleyed" which is a eye misalignment only a few % of people
have. Most people don´t do anything with it and then there are dedicated artists like
Kim Jung Gi or Leonardo Da Vinci who have the obsession for drawing and observation,
the years they put into it + they are walleyed which gives them the ability to see things
differently. I don´t have proof for that, it´s just my theory that Kim Jung Gi had that.
Leonardo da Vinci also had the ability to see "faster" than other people, that´s how he
could study the wing flap of a dragon fly

That's a good shot.

(Posts must be atleast 20 characters. -_-)

That's actually pretty darn good! One thing I would suggest is to get some rulers. I have a few different kinds for drawing and they're super useful when working on anything with perspective, especially backgrounds.

I see. Yeah, that woulda been helpful. I kinda just drew a bunch of lines and guessed where things go :sweat_02: Thanks for the suggestion!

That table in the front is really off now that I look at it. I've still got a ways to go.

ha ha, feedback time.... Got some from my collab partner and they're like, this is what it should look like. They essentially said the same things you did :rofl: