Reddit Reddit reviews Bridgman's Complete Guide to Drawing From Life: Over 1,000 Illustrations

We found 3 Reddit comments about Bridgman's Complete Guide to Drawing From Life: Over 1,000 Illustrations. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Arts & Photography
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Drawing
Figure Drawing Guides
Bridgman's Complete Guide to Drawing From Life: Over 1,000 Illustrations
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3 Reddit comments about Bridgman's Complete Guide to Drawing From Life: Over 1,000 Illustrations:

u/Cheeseho12 · 8 pointsr/altcomix

I'm gonna disagree with a lot of people and tell you to not buy Understanding Comics. I mean, you can, I don't disagree with most of what he teaches, but I disagree with his results. Perhaps it's one of those 'good in theory, terrible in practice' things. The Sculptor, his latest (?) book uses his UC technique 100% and while it makes for an easy read, it's visually boring and the story is just one unbelievable trope after another, complete garbage.

I'm also not going to tell you to copy other comic artists, that's a very common mistake in comics. When you copy other comic artists you learn their mistakes, or shortcuts, or cheats. I still find after I've drawn a page I'll go back and see where I unintentionally swiped a pose or technique from John Buscema (How to make Comics the Marvel Way had a big influence on me as a teenager, which is who it was made for).

For figure drawing you want George Bridgeman. His figure drawing techniques are the foundation for pretty much every other great illustrator in the last 100 years.

Another good source is Burne Hogarth (Dynamic Anatomy, Dynamic Figure Drawing) his stuff is more action and hero based, but his lessons are sound. He founded what became the School of Visual Arts. These were my first art books when I was a teenager, and they still hold up.

For storytelling, I go for Will Eisner's Graphic Storytelling and the Visual Narrative, Sequential Art Principles and throw in Expressive Anatomy, because, why not?

David Chelsea's Perspective for Comic Artists is great, because it teaches you exactly how to do correct perspective, then in the last chapter he tells you how to cheat at all of it.

For classes, take a look at the horribly designed website for http://comicsworkbook.com/ it's run by a guy, Frank Santoro, who's actually not one of my favorite artists, but he knows his shit, for sure, and he's a helluva nice guy who loves comics 100%. I think his full online class is $500 and he runs it twice a year, I think. Also look in your area for a college or art store that might have figure drawing classes, they are invaluable.

u/Hobersea · 3 pointsr/pics

If possible, try drawing a willing friend who might pose for you or enroll in a life drawing class through an art store or community college. Also drawing from photographs is a great way to begin learning how to draw the human form.

I recommend this book: http://www.amazon.com/Bridgmans-Complete-Guide-Drawing-Life/dp/0806930152

u/twosolitudes · 2 pointsr/AskReddit

I'm taking a continuing education course in drawing from a local college. In the first class, our teacher recommended getting a copy of Bridgman's guide(s).