Here's the advice I give to all artist. If you need poses, go to any porn site. Go to their gallery section, select softcore. This will give you every pose pretty much. For male poses, change the preferences to gay. The bonus is most porn sites are categorized so you can search a specific look of the model you are looking for through filters. Have fun.
@smokesalty One day they’ll be making a book about your comic career and those photos will crop up.
Lol! I totally do the same though. Sometimes you just can’t find the pose or angle you need.
I made a post about this a while back so I'll share it as it has some neat resources and ideas others have used.
Another thing I like to do is a photoshoot with friends in poses I think I will need. Works better if you have a list of stuff you wanna hit so you all aren't out there standing around going what next lol. Catching angles is probably the most helpful thing I can think of when doing this over general poses though. Next time I get a group together for a photoshoot, imma be all up in they business and standing over them for perspective reasons lol.
I also like using https://www.pexels.com/6 for when I need some background inspo or drawing exercise. They have all kinds of reference materials too.
Mannequins (both solid and digital) are great for help with dynamic camera angles but regardless of articulation, they usually have stiff hip and shoulder posturing. Quick photos with a cellphone or looking in a mirror (if your old like me) offer more natural detail. The mirror has the added benefit of bringing out your inner actor and helping you to feel what you want to draw as well as see it. The downside is you must make sure all your characters don't look like you (Jack Kirby). Also, if you'd like to avoid porn, might I suggest Pinterest.
Most of the time I use either google or myself. My phone has taken hundreds of pictures of me making dumb faces. I also have a webcam setup with an obs scene specifically for recording reference videos. I've got a few anatomy dolls that I use in a pinch too, and they're useful, but nothing is better than just doing the thing and getting it on camera. Particularly action or expressions. There's a lot of subtlety that dolls or 3d posers just can't capture, like weight distribution, or momentum, or lines of action, and expressions carry a heap of slight variations depending on the situation.
Having proper expression references is super important, and you learn a ton from drawing what you see, rather than correcting expressions to look "right", or more like an iconic expression. "Eyebrows down and a frown = angry" is a terrible way to approach them. There are so many versions of angry, like is the person angry because they're sad? Angry because they're scared or tense? Are they on the verge of tears or are they seeing red? Are they being stubborn? Are they play acting? Are they breathing hard? Usually if I act into a camera there will be a plethora of subtleties for the expressions that come out of that. I highly recommend it!
Poses? I have you covered. I have walked this road thousand of times xD
For quick 'I need a reference for the thing I have in my mind', its very useful one of this 'Body Kun' or Body Chan'. The originals are expensive, but in AliExpress there are a lot of other options that are also very useful:
For muscles I use the TBLeague models. I still have to get a female one:
Furthermore, you can take a picture of the pose, and use the jpg as reference in your favorite drawing program!
But If you want to model a character in a 3D program, you can use the models from CSP. Sometimes is difficult to pose them, so try to download some premade poses in the assets and move them a bit. Other solution is https://justsketch.me/10 page. An online 3D poser. Yet another solution is DesigDoll. This program was created for referecing, so its your best 3D bet. If you pay the license you can save your model, otherwise you will have to design it everytime you need a model, but once you have ready a pose you can save a jpg of the reference, or export the 3D as obj, that can be read in CSP as any other native 3D, and you can use the 3D camera from CSP to further adjust your pose details! The best thing in DesignDoll imo? You can upload another 3D objects there, an use them for your pose, as swords, guns, cars, etc. You can download a free 3D model, upload it in DesignDoll, create your model pose, export the obj, throw it into CSP, draw you character -and here is the best- hide in the options the model, and leave the object to extract the lines! Try it!
But you need reference images because your poses lacks certain je ne sais quoi? Of course Google Images is your friend. For a more random practice you can check https://quickposes.com/en/gestures/random7, or you can personalize a Pinterest account. But if you REALLY need something extra, go deep and buy poses magazines like 'BL Manga Pose Book Collection', 'Dara tto shita Pose Catalog 1', or others. There are tons in sites like https://www.cdjapan.co.jp/8
Finally, if you want to only see an image on your PC without much problem changing your view, opening tabs, or whatever, try PureRef. Its a free program that opens a window that its always open above other programs, and you can throw, or open, different images from the internet for you to use as reference, without opening other annoying programs or tabs! Below there is an example of how PureRef works.

Hope this little tutorial had helped you in your ways around the poses world =D
I've heard you mentioning drawing plenty of plus-size characters - do you have any go-tos for references for heavier characters? These days I feel pretty comfortable posing thin characters, but using those same procedures when drawing heavier characters makes them look kinda weird :'D For instance, I don't think a heavier person can really curl up on themself as tightly as a thin person could. The weight really adds a new dimension I have to consider
I have a few websites bookmarked for refs. Here is a good one (Warning: ARTISTIC NUDES AHEAD) https://www.human-anatomy-for-artist.com/29
The search isn’t that great, but it’s good for practicing life drawing and anatomy.
You ain't lying things really are different when the folds start scrunching up.
So I happen to have a lot of big folks in my family including myself, so I actually used them a LOT when drawing, particularly my sister. Though that's not the most helpful, so lemme move on to something helpful. Though if you have friends or family that don't mind you hawk eyeing them (or being photographed) for some studies, that's a great place to start.
On the net options:
Croquis Cafe on Vimeo (18+ to view) They have a few plus-size models there and nude models in general that are baller to ref from.
Plus-size clothing and lingerie sights like Torrid4 (Shape variety), Asos Curve4 (more natural bodies), Zeliforshe.3 The models aren't as static and often possed with backgrounds or more casually, and Saledress2
Pexels1 is pretty legit too and it's royalty-free stock images and they have lots of refs of most anything.
Famous big folks with lots of media
Some famous folks that have a lot of photos out there that are plus are Lizzo (and her show Watch Out for the Big Grrls; haven't watched it, but they defo got body variety), Naomi Watanabe, and Beth Ditto.
For Big Bodies in Motion
Pausing or screen capping scenes in movies with fat folks and redrawing them is another option too.
Amber Riley's3 season of Dancing with the Stars (Many a freeze-frame happened.)
I have other sources that I would recommend, but they are NSFW and I don't know how you feel about that so I won't explicitly say what they are (but you can probably guess), like it or not, it's a great way to see bodies being contorted into various shapes and being able to view them at different angles and in various states of undress.
Some key words I use when looking for refs for larger bodies when I need an external ref are (caution, these will often pull up nude figures as well); Full figured, BBW, plus size, fat bodies in motion, plus size yoga, plus size belly dancers/dancers in general.
Here are some popular artist that also draw plus folks that might also inspire some interpretations or help bridge fantasy and reality
Sophie Campbell2
EK Weaver, Current Comic Shot and Chaser1
Jungle Julia's Comic Big Jo
Maya Kern
Gawd this could be a thread in itself lol, but I hope this helps :).
@Lady_T_Musings , you are a LIFE SAVER ! I've always had trouble finding a good source of references for larger bodied folks.
For me, it's a mix of what other people have said. I have Body Kun & Chan sitting on my desk, as you can see here. I have the grey ones, so I usually end up photographing them with my phone on a dark background.
I fill in the inherent jankiness with figure study memories. I mostly use these to make sure something works in space, because sometimes virtual 3D pose dolls can get away from me.
I love Clip Studio's native pose dolls, they're my life, and so are the perspective & 3D tools in general. Buuut, they don't account for the squishiness of a body, and if I don't keep moving the camera I will end up with something that looks right from one angle.... but totally falls apart from another. I also use browser 3D references sometimes, I believe the right image was an earlier build of JustSketchMe.
If you're able to afford CSP, it's very rewarding to adjust some of the pose dolls to your characters' body types and use those models. It can be a bit trickier if they have "extra" parts like horns or wings, but the modeling program that goes with Paint is also free and pretty easy to use.
For weirder poses, like mid-action or sports, I'll pull up stock images or search through reference books that I saved from school. AdorkaStock is super great for when I have something specific in mind. I'll also use myself for some references, especially if it would just be faster than messing with dolls.
I mean, there's even a few panels where I traced over myself holding a sword to get the angle right
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