Thursday, December 18, 2008

Bone and Rib Drawing



















Here is my 3/4 and top view of the vertebra and rib.

6 comments:

MeganHarder said...

In the top picture I notice the subtle shading on the rib to give it two planes
In the top picture I notice a similar line weight on the whole spinal bone and a lighter line weight on the rib as it recedes.
In the top picture I notice shading on the top part of spinal bone body and the two circled planes connected to the body, and then on the side plane of the rib as well.
In the bottom picture I notice the end of the rib near the spinal bone jutting away from the spinal bone
In the bottom picture I notice the peak of the spinal bone closes to the viewer only has two planes
In the bottom picture I notice the inside plane of the spinal hole is thin and small.

Kalvin Yang said...

-I notice jagged paper on both presentation in class (but not on the posted version... good job).

-I notice a different size in the presentation paper.

-I notice the back lines on the ribs are lighter than the lines in front.

-I notice shading to show different plane changes.

Kalyn said...

I notice the basic sructure of the vertebra and rib.
I notice the similar use of shadow and line throughout the drawing.
I notice the difference of the veiws of the two drawings
I notice similar widths are used within plane changes.
I notice few contour lines to define plane change and texture on both drawings.

Unknown said...

I notice subtle value changes in both renderings of the vertebrae and rib. I notice that there is more value than contour line throughout both drawings. I notice that you studied the subject from two different perspectives.

Nou Chee Her said...

• I notice that the artist presented two drawing of the same object, on drawing on each separate pager.
• I notice that the two drawings show a different perspective of the same observed object(s). One, specifically the top one being presented, is drawn to show a three-quarter view, while the other (bottom drawing presented) is drawn showing the top planes of the object(s).

Andrea said...

Xai- I notice that the top vies is a three quarters view while the bottom is a lateral view. On the bottom the line weight stays consistent from front to back. On the top different line weights help to show depth in the image. Value is used to show plainer changes in some parts of the image. Mark making is consistent in both images. Crossing lines are used as preliminary marking to help the artist align the rib and vertebrae consistently.