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Published: 2010-04-19 22:18:29 +0000 UTC; Views: 2256; Favourites: 39; Downloads: 0
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Description
Back muscle study for my anatomy class, might scrap later. I also might mack another one tonight, depending on how brutal hw gets.HB, B pencils
Prismacolor pencils
01 micron pen
White charcoal
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Comments: 7
FilterRePhilltered In reply to aidan8500 [2010-06-12 03:15:46 +0000 UTC]
Using contrast to my advantage, a color is always brighter and more vibrant when it is next to a darker color. On top of that, One thing I learned is that darker colors are more vibrant and lighter colors actually lose saturation due to being so close to white. In fact the brightest tone you will get is the tones in between the midtone and before the point where the shadows start.
There's a lot more to color theory, but i'll spare ya the digital lecture (and I'm still learning about it as well lol)
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aidan8500 In reply to FilterRePhilltered [2010-06-12 03:23:17 +0000 UTC]
yes i see what you mean, i would normally put similar hues to close together and the brightness off the colors would be lost among each other, i see my error now, thanks
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Ito-Saith-Webb [2010-04-19 22:23:23 +0000 UTC]
Looks fine to me but I am just wondering why you are making the lumbar muscles into bone. Unless those are suppose to be the sacrosanctness muscles.
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FilterRePhilltered In reply to Ito-Saith-Webb [2010-04-19 22:31:07 +0000 UTC]
honestly I was following another books example lol. I think the example was meant to focus on the thoracic/cervical region, along with the os coxae, didn't mean to throw off anybody into thinking it was bone .
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Ito-Saith-Webb In reply to FilterRePhilltered [2010-04-19 22:38:01 +0000 UTC]
I figured it was something like that. It think it was because those areas are gray, smooth and have largely different texture than the rest of the muscles. Looks cool though.
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