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Seth Lynch
Seth Lynch
Illustrator / Concept Artist
Activity Feed
Seth Lynch
Here is a few, I didn't use the eye dropper when doing these.
Seth Lynch
Amazing! Thank you so much :)
Seth Lynch
Hello, thank you for taking the time to put this course together! I would love any feedback you have thanks!
Seth Lynch
Awesome first lesson! Looking forward to this course! :)
Jon Neimeister
Thanks, Seth! :D
Seth Lynch
Hey J, I'm new to Zbrush for about 3 months, I want to work as a Concept artist/Character artist, how did you personally tackle learning anatomy?
Seth Lynch
Hey Karla, how do you schedule your usual days? do you wake up and get right to work, how much do you allow yourself for free time?
Seth Lynch
Do you think its unwise to try to freelance as a concept artist before working in a studio environment?
Seth Lynch
Hey Antonio, when you first started drawing Dragon's were you building a visual library from real life animals or did you take from Dragon art that already existed?
Seth Lynch
Hey Stan, Just want to say I'm loving Proko 2.0 and feel privileged to be able to be in on the ground floor. I'm taking your figure drawing course right now, I'm just wondering if an artist as far along as you still does gesture studies?
DoodleMick
3yr
Any future projects with Court Jones?
Seth Lynch
Hey guys, this is my first time posting for feedback. This is actually pretty tricky haha Let me know what you think I should focus on improving thanks :)
Bradwynn Jones
Hi Seth! Some look on the money at getting at the core of the flow of the torso and limbs. Others are missing the flow. Look out for placing symmetry in the form. For example in the first figure's legs there is too much symmetry which kills the flow of the form. Try to use asymmetry to help increase the flow of the gesture like you did with the legs in the third image. Good studies and keep looking for that flow.
Demetrio Cran
Hi Seth, maybe you could work on improving your center line and balance. A trick for working the balance is to draw a dark tone where the model is standing... something like a shadow... the minimum required for resemble a surface. A perspective grid can make the trick even better! Regarding center line, you should revise your drawing, using observation of the pose and logical thinking. Hope it helps!
Rebecca Shay
Good job! Keep going and you'll get better over time. Don't be afraid to use straight lines. In Stan's video he said to use C, S, and I, and most beginners forget about "I". Straight line provides structure, and will let your figure look more solid and with weight. Also watch out for symmetrical curves, like the left arm in the last picture. It looks like a pair of parenthesis: ( ). In that case you can have the bottom line straight and the top one more of a S curve.
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