Shawn Kain Leo !

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Fag
elliotoille:

felt like doing a tutorial thingy (what should I call these??) again! I think I’ll make a tag for these in case I do more. This time I’m gonna talk a little about how angles affect how clothing falls aaaand stuff. here we go…
Given: The first drawing of these three is how the clothing naturally wants to fall, how it is made to be shaped. Or, whichever pose you could take that will give the garment the least amount of creases.
I’ll actually talk about the green first; this is a representation of the hip box, which itself is a representation/simplification of your whole pelvis area. You see how your legs and hip box oppose angles here. in almost all poses except standing straight, your hip box and legs will create a bent angle, which affects how clothes fall.
The red/blue is the skirt (obvs), the red specifically is the ellipses of the top and bottom openings of the skirt. This skirt is very stiff material for the sake of this example, so notice how the two ellipses always match eachother. the top ellipse is where the skirt is actually attached to the body, so it’s the boss; the bottom ellipse will more or less do exactly what the top one does.
here’s where the fact that the legs and hip box are at different angles becomes important. The top of the skirt is attached to the hip box, but the bottom ellipse is in the realm of the legs. The orange lampshade shape diagram there is a simplification of this. It is very much like if you were to tilt a lampshade. The side you are bending towards will hug the body and create creases. The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line.

It even works with pants, though as the bottom ellipse(s) gets farther away from the top there’s more room for the garment to get distorted by gravity, perspective, and bent knees and such. But with this last example you can really see how the side touching the legs really hugs the body underneath, whereas the other side hangs off of it in a straighter, crease-less line.
Dresses are a little different because their top ellipse is attached to your torso/ribcage mass rather than the hip box.

Much of the time you get the same result as with a skirt. However if the hip box and ribcage mass are opposed sideways rather than forward or backward, it becomes a little tougher:

You can see in the third drawing how a shirt and a skirt together would fall in opposite ways if your body is bent sideways. If the shirt is long, just like I mentioned above about the long pants, there is more distortion of this effect.
I’ll take what I said above, “The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line”, and add a bit to the end: “… until it hits something.” In the fourth drawing above, the garment is falling off the body in a straight line on the right side. If you lengthen the garment:

The straight side continues down as normal until it hits the leg and becomes the body-hugging side. in response to that, the body-hugging side from farther up becomes the straight side when it falls off the hip.
Aaand with that I think I’ll stop lol. I hope that wasn’t hard to understand. It’s easy to do yourself, just wear a skirt or some loose pajama pants and take hula poses in the mirror lol.
Pop-upView Separately

elliotoille:

felt like doing a tutorial thingy (what should I call these??) again! I think I’ll make a tag for these in case I do more. This time I’m gonna talk a little about how angles affect how clothing falls aaaand stuff. here we go…

Given: The first drawing of these three is how the clothing naturally wants to fall, how it is made to be shaped. Or, whichever pose you could take that will give the garment the least amount of creases.

  • I’ll actually talk about the green first; this is a representation of the hip box, which itself is a representation/simplification of your whole pelvis area. You see how your legs and hip box oppose angles here. in almost all poses except standing straight, your hip box and legs will create a bent angle, which affects how clothes fall.
  • The red/blue is the skirt (obvs), the red specifically is the ellipses of the top and bottom openings of the skirt. This skirt is very stiff material for the sake of this example, so notice how the two ellipses always match eachother. the top ellipse is where the skirt is actually attached to the body, so it’s the boss; the bottom ellipse will more or less do exactly what the top one does.
  • here’s where the fact that the legs and hip box are at different angles becomes important. The top of the skirt is attached to the hip box, but the bottom ellipse is in the realm of the legs. The orange lampshade shape diagram there is a simplification of this. It is very much like if you were to tilt a lampshade. The side you are bending towards will hug the body and create creases. The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line.

imageimage

It even works with pants, though as the bottom ellipse(s) gets farther away from the top there’s more room for the garment to get distorted by gravity, perspective, and bent knees and such. But with this last example you can really see how the side touching the legs really hugs the body underneath, whereas the other side hangs off of it in a straighter, crease-less line.

Dresses are a little different because their top ellipse is attached to your torso/ribcage mass rather than the hip box.

image

Much of the time you get the same result as with a skirt. However if the hip box and ribcage mass are opposed sideways rather than forward or backward, it becomes a little tougher:

image

You can see in the third drawing how a shirt and a skirt together would fall in opposite ways if your body is bent sideways. If the shirt is long, just like I mentioned above about the long pants, there is more distortion of this effect.

I’ll take what I said above, “The side you are bending away from will fall off the body in a straight line”, and add a bit to the end: “… until it hits something.” In the fourth drawing above, the garment is falling off the body in a straight line on the right side. If you lengthen the garment:

image

The straight side continues down as normal until it hits the leg and becomes the body-hugging side. in response to that, the body-hugging side from farther up becomes the straight side when it falls off the hip.

Aaand with that I think I’ll stop lol. I hope that wasn’t hard to understand. It’s easy to do yourself, just wear a skirt or some loose pajama pants and take hula poses in the mirror lol.

(via 1tacobrother)

Source: elliotoille

  • 1 hour ago > elliotoille
  • 19732
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-upView Separately

(via theartofthegentleman)

Source: millionairesroad

  • 1 hour ago > millionairesroad
  • 864
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
PreviousNext

(via brenttt)

Source: kikistiel

  • 1 hour ago > kikistiel
  • 17766
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
PreviousNext

(via dongoutside)

Source: mysimpsonsblogisgreaterthanyours

  • 1 day ago > mysimpsonsblogisgreaterthanyours
  • 2136
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
PreviousNext

cjwho:

Tucson Mountain Retreat by Dust

Modern single-storey residence designed by Dust located in Tucson, Arizona.

(via theartofthegentleman)

Source: cjwho

  • 6 days ago > cjwho
  • 426
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Your very Personal and Intense Disney Ask:

  • Aurora: Story of your first kiss
  • Rapunzel: 5 things from your bucket list
  • Dory: Something someone has told you that you can't forget (two good things and one bad)
  • Pocahontas: Something new you taught someone.
  • Mulan: Do you trust your gut feeling? What happened.
  • Jasmine: The story of when you had to really trust someone. Was it easy?
  • Belle: Is there someone you are close who no one else likes? What's the story?
  • Ariel: Where do you think you belong, and why?
  • Flounder: Something that surprised you and frightened you.
  • Eric: Have you ever helped a stranger? What happened.
  • Aladdin: A sacrifice you made for someone.
  • Tiana: A time you tried the hardest for something.
  • Boo: A childhood hero.
  • Cruella: Something you really want but you aren't allowed to have.
  • Seven Dwarfs: 7 things you like in the people around you.
  • Kronk: What you are best at in the kitchen?
  • Simba: Something a parent has taught you.
  • Cinderella: "A dream is a wish your heart makes" What's that for you?
  • Nemo: Your bravest moment.
  • Terk: Are you a big brother/sister figure to anyone?
  • Buzz: Your favourite fantasy world (aka Harry Potter, Star Wars), if any.
  • Alice: Done drugs?
  • Peter Pan: Something from your childhood that you still love.

Source: ideclaresurrenderpendence

  • 1 week ago > ideclaresurrenderpendence
  • 100963
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Small Rant for Quality

Sometimes I feel like low quality things are accepted just because we’re in high school. Although I don’t find myself to be “the best” or even any good at designs, when I see shit like http://www.signazon.com/contest/grad2013/7szyb3z2/ it really makes me wonder about what standards we do have. Fields of work are becoming so increasingly competitive, requiring stricter standards earlier and earlier, yet we still get shit like this in first place? Honestly if I was giving the scholarship, I would throw first place away - the level of work and effort was terrible, even if the kid was popular and had people vote for her.
It makes no sense either - I can see custom blogs and other types of social media related goodies with almost maximal customization via their own creativity, but when I look through class projects or scholarship entries, the level of work could have been done in a middle school setting. It seems like creativity is so belittled, professional design even more so. 

  • 1 week ago
  • 1
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
View Separately

(via theartofthegentleman)

Source: maninpink

  • 1 week ago > maninpink
  • 66
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
PreviousNext

mokendamint:

helpfulharrie:

Source: Coyotemange

See Also:
(click)

Ooo~ I love brushes <3

Also, will be handy for future projects I have in mind

(via 1tacobrother)

Source: coyotemange.deviantart.com

  • 1 week ago > helpfulharrie
  • 12441
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
Pop-up View Separately
PreviousNext

quinnfabray:

this is the best thing i’ve seen in my entire life

(via melmeimei)

Source: quinnfabray

  • 1 week ago > quinnfabray
  • 48987
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+
Page 1 of 111
← Newer • Older →

About

Clark c/o 2013 √ . . . . . . . . .
Awkward √ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Design √ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Food √ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Pharmacology √ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Fag
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union