Showing posts with label how to draw a hand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to draw a hand. Show all posts

Monday, December 13, 2010

How to Draw Hands

 These prints from The Principles of Drawing by Gerard De Lairesse. Published by Thomas Bowles: 1752, London. 5th Edition are for sale on Ebay.

The Principles of Drawing: or, An Easy and Familiar Method whereby Youth are directed in the Practice of the useful Art. Being A COMPLEAT DRAWING BOOK: Containing a Curious Collection of Examples in all the Variety of Cases; As the several Parts of the Human Body, whole Figures, Landskips, Cattle, Building &c. curiously Engraved on Copper-Plates, after the Designs of Albert Durer, Abrah. Bloemart, Carlo Morac, Le Clerc, Hollar, and other Great Masters. To which is prefix'd, AN INTRODUCTION TO DRAWING; Containg an Account of the Instruments and Materials used in DRAWING, and the Method of managing them; also Instructions to form the Judgment of a young Beginner, and direct his Hand in Practice, with easy and proper Lessons for him at the first Entrance. ALSO, Easy and Proper Lessons for a YOUNG BEGINNER, with Instructions to form his Judgment and direct his Practice. Translated from the FRENCH of Monsieur GERARD DE LAIRESSE, and improved with Abstracts from C.A. Du Fresnoy.

French 19th century academic drawing of a pair of hands. 

How to Draw the Hand and Foot A Layered Approach Part II  Draw Real Hands! (Discover Drawing Series)


Gerard de Lairesse: An Artist betweeen Stage and Studio The principles of drawing: or, an easy and familiar method whereby youth are directed in the practice of that useful art. Being a compleat drawing book

Saturday, June 12, 2010

The Landon Course of Cartooning - How to Draw Hands

"In drawing hands for comic or comic figures they should be made mainly in outline, because even in a large drawing they are but a small part of the picture. A little shading occasionally helps to show the form of the hand. Be careful, however, not to overdo the shading."

"Fig A, Group 1, of the Plate on THE HAND shows a five pointed object. This form is the foundation principle of the hand and represents what we call the palm of the hand. Fig. B shows the fingers added. Note the comparative length of the fingers and thumb. Fig. C shows the palm of the hand developed a little more and Fig D. shows the opposite side worked out. Notice that all of these forms are worked out out from the five-pointed Fig A. Take a pencil and pad of scratch paper and practice on this. You will find it easy to draw hands by using this scheme. The five pointed figure can, of course, be erased and the full outline of the hand can be completed after you have determined its proportion and form."

"Now suppose you turned the five-pointed Fig C. over it was almost flat as in Fig E. The addition of fingers and thumb would give you another view of the hand. This same position of the five-pointed figure can be used to show Fig. F, which is Fig. D turned over."

"Figs. G and H show two  views of a hand clutching a stick. The five-pointed figure is used again. Note how the fingers are wrapped around the stick. Take your pencil and try these positions."

"Fig. I show you the relative proportions of the fingers and hand. The knuckles where the fingers join the hand are midway from the wrist to the tip of the longest finger. The main knuckle of each finger is halfway from the back of the hand to the tip of each finger. These are good points to bear in mind."

"In group 2 we take up a number of different kinds of hands in various positions. Now in drawing cartoons, the artist must bear in mind the character of the person he is drawing. For instance, the dude would have thin, delicate hands; a fat man or woman would have plump, round hands; a hobo has rough, freckled or hairy hands; naturally, a woman's hands would be much more slender than those of a man. Bear in mind to make the hands fit the type of figure you are drawing."

"No. 1 shows a hand in the position of holding up a tray or other flat object. Notice that very little detail is used except to indicate the finger nails and knuckles. No. 2 shows one way to draw a negro's hand. Nos. 3, 4 and 5 show three types of women's hands in the position of resting on the hip. I want to call your attention  to the way the finger nails are drawn on No. 4. Small circles near the end of the finger are used to indicate them."

"No. 6 shows another way to draw a negro's hand. Here shading lines are used instead of solid black. No. 7 shows a fat woman's hand adorned with rings. Nos. 8, 9 and 10 show rough, freckled, hairy hands, the kind drawn in making a "two-fisted" scrapper."

No. 11 shows an old lady's hand with an old-fashioned silk mitt. No. 12 represents a small boy's mitten, and No. 13 a lady's glove. Notice the seams and stitching at the back of the glove. The suggestions of these details helps bring out the glove. Fig 14. shows a lady's hand holding a wine glass. Compare Fig. 10 which is a man's hand, with Fig. 14, the hand of a woman, and you will catch the idea of the difference in the character. The man's hand is much heavier and shows the knuckles, etc., and the woman's hand is drawn mostly with curved lines."

Charles N. Landon's mail order correspondence course on cartooning instructed young cartoonists in the early 1900s in the fundamentals of drawing cartoon characters, influencing a generation of artists. Carl Barks (Donald Duck, Uncle Scrooge), Floyd Gottfredson (Mickey Mouse), Roy Crane (Wash Tubbs, Buzz Sawyer), Milton Caniff (Steve Canyon) and Jack Cole (Plastic Man) all took the course.

The Landon School of Illustrating and Cartooning by Charles N. Landon

A reprint of the course is available at Enchanted Images.

The Comics Journal #296There is a review of the book in The Comics Journal #296.

Popular Science - April 1920, Landon recruited for the N.E.A. Syndicate so it is not surprising that his students were among the recruits, but there was more to it, in some ways he started the course in order to recruit cartoonists to fulfill the demand as newspaper publishing expanded in the early 20th century.



Magazines at Amazon.com:


How to Draw People at Figure-Drawings.com

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Pencil Drawing for Fun

Pencil Drawing for Fun was a pulp drawing instruction book published in 1952 by Fawcett Books.  The company was started in 1919 by Wilford Hamilton Fawcett (Wikipedia article). The book was edited by Larry Eisinger, who edited a bunch of Fawcett's books.

The book combined drawing lesson from various sources including Andre Loomis' Fun with a Pencil and Figure Drawing for All It's Worth

Pencil Drawing for Fun

How to draw - and have fun with a pencil and pen (Fawcett books;no.396)

 
How to draw heads using the divided ball and plane.

 
How to draw hands using the relationships between the knuckles.

 


 
How to draw the figure, notice how the finished drawing makes the figure more slender and elongated following the convention of the 1950s.

 
How to use perspective when drawing the figure and how to use foreshortening when drawing the figure.

Pencil Drawing for Fun at Abebooks.com.

Books by Andrew Loomis:

Fun WIth a Pencil  Figure Drawing for All It's Worth  Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (Walter Foster Art Instruction Series, 191 - Figure Drawing)

Fun With a Pencil

Figure Drawing for All It's Worth

Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (Walter Foster Art Instruction Series, 191 - Figure Drawing)

50 results for Figure Drawing for all It's Worth at Amazon.com

 Figure Drawing for All It's Worth at Abebooks.com.











Dibujo de Cabeza y Manos (Spanish Edition)

FIGURE DRAWING FOR ALL ITS WORTH: JAPANESE LANGUAGE EDITION








Related e-book
A Guide to Better Figure Drawing by Cecile Hardy
Line of Action - Drawing from the Model - Creatively
Clothing the Figure Drawing
The Glamour Girl