Drawing
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How To Master Drawing With The Best Tips

Drawing is an often intimidating, difficult task. It can take years to master just the basics, but it doesn’t have to be. The most important thing about drawing is that you must learn how you work best, which may not always be traditional and cumbersome for the human brain. Realistic soldier drawing is just one of the many examples. The answers are simple. Start with a rabbit. Start with something that can be drawn easily. 

Start by copying what you have seen so often, and the easiest to copy is a simple animal such as a rabbit. You can learn how to draw animals absolutely naturally, without even watching movies of animals moving and walking in front of your eyes. Animals walk just like they’re alive; they don’t walk stiffly or with any awkwardness as humans typically depict them when they try drawing them.

How To Master Drawing With The Best Tips :

1. Decide where you want to start. 

If you’re copying a rabbit from life, just close your eyes and imagine how the body is shaped and how the joints fit together. Then open your eyes to see if that image matches what’s in front of you. If it does, then mark the paper with a pencil or pen to show how it’s laying on the surface of the paper. 

Then draw one line that represents the spine, then two lines below them representing where the hind legs are placed on either side of the body. Come back later and erase these lines if they are no longer needed to begin your drawing.

2. Start by drawing a very light line.

You can lightly draw into the paper with your pencil, just a little bit of pressure so you don’t actually break through the other side of the paper. This first line is just there to show you how to make all the future lines fit together and come together in one smooth picture that makes sense. This initial sketch doesn’t have to be perfect. It’s just something to get your feet wet so that you can see what’s necessary before you actually begin your drawing with ink or paint.

3. Make sure you have something in mind to draw.

It’s easy to get lost and forget what the purpose of your drawing is, like not remembering that you’re drawing a rabbit. For example, if you’re planning to draw a rabbit, then make sure you have a picture of a rabbit to look at while you draw. 

You can also make drawings of other rabbits which can be helpful if your drawing is similar but different to the one in front of you. This way you can get a better idea of how the rabbit should look like.

4. Add very subtle lines to the body.

The lines you added in step 1 weren’t used to draw out all the shapes that make up a rabbit’s body; those were just there for your first attempt at drawing a rabbit. In this step, you’re going to add more lines and create the shapes necessary for each section of your drawing. You can go as dark or as light with the pressure of your pencil tip to make these lines.

5. Add more lines and darken your version.

This is your chance to get creative and creative with all the different features that make up a rabbit’s body, such as their nose, ears, or feet. You can also once again lighten them up or go in and erase some of the lines that you don’t need anymore. 

However, it’s important that at least three lines are still intact. After this, you can erase the lines that you don’t need anymore and get a better feel for the surface of the paper. You can always erase some more later if needed.

6. Draw the tail joints.

You’re going to do this step either in one or two steps depending on how close together you want your joints to be, but with your thumb and forefinger through each drawing of the tail joint. This is going to be as dark as you want it to be because it will blend into the other lines when you draw them farther in your drawing. Remember that this is a rabbit’s tail and it has to be drawn with the appropriate curves.

7. Add more lines, round out the body details, add the paws, and you’re done!

Add more lines using your pencil but be gentle with your strokes since they will all blend together. You can also start filling in the areas with any details that you’d like as well. For example, if you’re going to watch rabbit’s run a lot, then use those examples to let them run around your drawing. It’s important that none of your lines cross over other lines because it’s going to ruin your picture later on when you want to erase or add something else.

Aaron Finch
There are many labels that could be given to describe me, but one thing’s for certain: I am an entrepreneur with passion. Whether it's building websites and social media campaigns for new businesses or traveling the world on business trips - being entrepreneurs means constantly looking at yourself in a different light so as not get bored of your own success!