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Jul 2021

It's best if you have a streaming service like Hulu to go through coz the Max app itself is horrible. I'm watching the show through my fam's Hulu(though I have a Hulu account of my own) and the streaming is better.

Guess who slept the whole day :pumpkin: not the worst experience in my life :joy:

Absolutely :smile: We'll see how the second jab will go ^^

Pretty much my experience too. Made me real sleepy.

Friend decided to send me an article about "The most realistic painting in the world".

So, what was it? :smiley: the first time I learned about hyperrealism was when I saw Dennis Wojtkiewicz's citrus paintings, I am still fascinated :slight_smile:

I didn't even open it. I just called it a night. Which wasn't fair in hindsight.
It was one of Leng Jun's painting of a woman. I've never really looked at hyperrealism.

Ah, that one!
Yeah, it's a bit hard to... judge hyperrealism, so to say :sweat_smile: for me it's both one of the least and most fascinating directions of art simultaneously.
Still like those citrus paintings though... maybe because they look a bit extraterrestrial at this point how he paints them.
Hyperrealistic humans are not that cool :pumpkin:

I guess for the purpose of making some aspect of the piece pop, or immersing in a focal point, I can appreciate the innovation. It becomes like a case study. I could be jaded but I think the thrill factor comes from the grass always being greener when you see a more realistic one.

I haven't done a retro in a while. Got martial arts class in a bit so I'll do this quickly

What went well?
1. Reworked major parts of my work-in-progress (Paws) drawing. More creative options
2. Did some comparison analysis and found that my digital drawings could be much more "full". Starting to make better use of space.

What could be done better?
1. Instead of looking at each drawing as an agile "Story", I need to look at them more like "Epics".

Hmmm, the last one :thinking: do you mean like something that already has a full story there, with a...clear ending, so to say?

Browsing through some cool artists I am subbed to. This one artist who is absolutely great in their details, but what they are even better at is showing the volume with the minimum amount of lines, purely amazing, I just can't :cry_swag:

Do they just just perfectly place each line so that the shadow and structure is clearly defined?
(those line hatching masters)

Stories are weird with how they are used. In a manner of speaking... A "story" in Software Development Lifecycle would be a goal with a definitive start to end set of tasks to complete(SMART-ish). Usually it's something small to be completed within 1-2 week sprint. An Epic would contains multiple related "Stories" towards introducing a major accomplishment. As silly as it sounds, 2 weeks is too short of a time period for me to complete a drawing that I can learn from, and develop. This will of course be different for my comic because of the format.

SDLC - 1. Project 2. Epic 3. Story 4. Sub-Tasks
Comic - 1. Series 2. Chapter 3. Pages 4. Panels
Fineart - 1. Series 2. Illustrations 3. Focal Point 4. Techniques

I'm still winging this agile crossover theory to art

Somehow they are just placing lines properly to make a nice feeling of structure even without any shadows or anything, I guess that's just a lot of practice xD

Whoa, okay, I got you! That's an interesting approach :hushed:

Phew, sorted out my random sketches file with like two hundred layers :neutral_face: I miss the times I had every art properly signed by the day and month, gotta return to that kind of cataloguing :sweat_smile:

I have a horrible habit of not signing my work. I've also wondered about keeping a single document for all sketches and do each sketch on a new layer. Wasn't really sure if that was a "good practice" lol

I've done this here and there and the biggest problem is I forget where it is in the layers, so it's like...not a great way for me to organize, I've found. But, if I'm making a piece in a theme and I want to choose the best sketch in order to refine it--then it's nice.

It's very useful for sure, especially when you want to look through the old stuff, I started signing it in 2006, wish it was earlier :smile:
Last year I made a few documents with various purpose, like a document for random sketches, a document for Hexameron sketches, for old-art-redraws sketches, etc. It's a bit messier than having a document for every sketch, but saves space :sweat_smile: If I make a sketch from a particular comic in Random, I relocate it to it's proper place, and if I am going colors, I make a separate document ^^

Went deep into anatomy articles to learn about back muscles, because daaaaaaaamn. The reason was that the part that I know for damn sure should be some nice long muscles is just fascia, i.e. looks flat on every anatomical artwork. Glad that I did it, because well at least I was right about muscles, turned out they just located under that damn fascia xD
Now I have like 50 photos of very muscular backs on my Pinterest :sweat_02: