

It may sound boring and it may get tedious, but grinding like that is how all those artists you admire developed their skills to get to where they are. You can knock out dozens of poses in one sitting and that'll help your skills develop super fast. You're generally going to get about as much practice with anatomy in a piece that takes you 2 hours as you are a sketch that takes you 2 minutes. And two, it allows you practice super efficiently. One, the time limit forces you to focus on the big picture and learn how the body flows. It shows you pictures of models for brief intervals (usually ranging from around 15 seconds to 2 minutes) and you try to draw the entire pose in that time limit. eBook bundle with extras - stuffed animal fursuit buddy with video tutorials.


I don't mean to discourage you, just draw with the style you want to draw in. Check out our furry plush selection for the very best in unique or custom. You have to study anatomy and practice anatomy so you can understand the proper structures, then you have to study and practice the actual style you're going for. In fact in my experience, cartoony styles are the long way. This, sadly, is not a shortcut to drawing bodies. I'm fine with drawing simpler/less detailed/more toony bodies Winslow, but if you google around you can probably find some pretty good anatomy guides for free. I really like the book Classic Human Anatomy in Motion by Valerie L. So the only real way to learn to draw bodies is through studying anatomy.
