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Mar 2015

I usually have lots of problems drawing people riding stuff, like motorcycles, bikes or horses.

Apples, that shape is just... that single leaf... w-why.

I'm just joking =P . Regards to all 8_8

Well, that would be quite a few things:
- Perspective, in general. Really gotta practise this... Also, foreshortening. Can't make it look right, the characters just end up looking like they have really short arms/legs/ect.
- Hands. Also feet and shoes.
- Machines/mecha... those kinds of things. Kinda hard to get them looking right. (Had to trace the cars in one of my recent comics ahaha...)
- Most animals that aren't cats/felines, rodents, dogs/canines (and only some of those, too), rabbits, fish, bugs (lol)...
-

Facial continuity. I am very terrible and keeping faces looking the same from comic to comic.

feet...feet...FEET are quite an odd shape that you need to learn if you want to draw character in action.
Also perspective but only really on buildings other than that trees and rocks are my friend! I am a hippy what do you want.

I take pictures of scenery I want, especially since I live in the city, or I look up traveling sites and find awesome looking places. I then take the picture of whatever I need, paste it into Manga Studio, and trace over it with the line tool. All the hard work of design is done, although inking at the pixel level can be a work of its own. The cool thing though is that you can take pictures of local scenery and do outrageous stuff over top to keep things nostalgic.

For my comic DeathCall2 I took a picture of a bridge from different angles and traced over it, the same with the bike. After that, I just had to shade it and ink it.

(Although, I'm hoping to learn from this as well to be able to make my own backgrounds. The middle, free-floating panel with the guy standing on the maintenance walk I did without using the paste method)

Hope that encourages those who have trouble with backgrounds to get better and find some awesome scenery, even in their own backyard.

Cities and towns, especially from a distance (this is one of the biggest things that has kept me from creating a comic). Hands, feet, and foreshortening are other things I struggle with when drawing.

Whenever I write strip that calls for T-Rex flying an F-14 Tomcat, I find it hard to make it look like they all belong to the same universe.

backgrounds. i think backgrounds are pretty challenging sometimes, even though i don't usually have backgrounds.

Foreshortening is easily the trickiest thing to get right. I also find it can be a difficult to strike the right balance when it comes to how much detail to include depending on an object's 'distance'. I'm continually having to remind myself not to draw distant objects with too much detail, but rather take more of an 'expressionist's' approach.

Question, is everyone who's having trouble with buildings using Manga Studio / Clip Paint? I'm only saying because you can very quickly set up perspective rulers, find some references and then just hack away at it.

Funny, I relish background/perspective stuff, although I agree with you on the kissing. Any expressions or complex interactions can always be a headache.

Sounds like you might be making the girl's hair too complicated. It may sound weird, but you can usually get away with just a few thick 'strands' that will end up giving the illusion of lots of individual hairs.

I see. I'll just have to do my best to keep that in mind. Thanks.

Hands and consistent faces augh. backgrounds too

Hands, and feeth are still my weakpoint D: And recently I try to add more backgrounds and practice perspective, because I hated to draw them. Umm... I don't say I like to draw them now, but sometimes it's kinda fun to draw them, because I know it'll look cool after I finished XD Same goes on action scenes.

13 days later

HATS!!! Specifically, men's broad-brimmed hats. I literally can't draw them at odd angles without taking a photo and tracing the basic shape.