Well, I usually work with really big shapes at first, to kind of get the grand picture and composition where I want to. It's easier to get it right with bigger shapes. Generally, I start with big details (such as the mountain to the left) and work my way into medium detail, as the tree, and end with grass and highlights.
The coloring part is really hard for me, but I usually try to pick a shade of blue(in this case)that matches the orange Really hard to explain.
The coloring part is the toughest for some 70% of people who are involved with any sort of drawing (statistics wise). I, for instance, fail miserably at it. Blue is the opposite of orange, on the color wheel, I think. And painting with opposite colors, that's one of the color theory strategies, if I'm recalling correctly ...
So, do you have any tips/tricks on how to insert such shapes into a drawing? Where do you start?
Well, I usually work with really big shapes at first, to kind of get the grand picture and composition where I want to. It's easier to get it right with bigger shapes.
Generally, I start with big details (such as the mountain to the left) and work my way into medium detail, as the tree, and end with grass and highlights.
The coloring part is really hard for me, but I usually try to pick a shade of blue(in this case)that matches the orange
Blue is the opposite of orange, on the color wheel, I think. And painting with opposite colors, that's one of the color theory strategies, if I'm recalling correctly ...
Anyway, thanks for the pointers.
No problem!
Det är iaf inte en penis