Karikatur Digital via email

Senin, 31 Maret 2008

Direct Drawing Cartoon



Direct Drawing Cartoon


Not only use scanning. You can draw directly on your computer but its need more time and higher accurate.

For exercise your skill, you can open click ClipArt file to edit. (Example ClipArt on Microsoft Office) on this file use .WMF and you can access with ClipArt folder in Microsoft Office installation (usually on c:\program files\microsoft offices\clipart) files .WMF (Windows Meta Files) vector format, therefore every line and picture you can edit directly with CorelDraw.




Drawing Cartoon Exercise

Please make basic cartoon with tool for line edit.














After that put black background, you can add different colors element (example face shape) and put in your object.
















Last step, add other object so all will be complete.

Jumat, 28 Maret 2008

A face drawing tutorial

A face drawing tutorial

Drawing characters is a pure-fun hobby and it can also be a source of good side income or a rewarding career.


First draw an oval.



Now keep in mind this shape actually represents the head of your charater and is 3 dimentional. The guide line line drawn here will help you to visualize it's 3d nature. Draw eyeballs as shown.

Add eye brows.



Now add ears.



Time to give some hair.



This is a chin up posture. Note how the nose looks at this pose.

Adding mouth makes your character more expressive.

Add double chin and other finishing touches to complete your work.



Illustrated by. Alfonsus Yori

Website: www.alfyori.com


How to Draw Cartoon Dogs?

How to Draw Cartoon Dogs?

This cartoon dogs drawing lesson is a little different than some of the other tutorials you may have done on this site because instead of starting off with simple shapes were going to start off by drawing forms.




Step 1 - The Head and Body Forms

There are two lines in this step. The curved line at the top that looks a little bit like an unfolded paperclip is the head and the outline of the back. The other line is the chest and midsection.

Take a quick look at the finished drawing and see how the curve of the head will actually make the smile of the dog. As the line curves towards the back of the head it straightens out. It might look a little strange right now but we'll add the nose (muzzle) in the next step and the face should start to come together.


Step 2 - Legs, Arm, Ears and the Muzzle

We'll start at the bottom and work our way up. Draw a curve on each side of the body at the bottom to make the two hind legs.

Add two lines for the arm about two thirds of the way up the line that connects to the head. The character will be waving to make sure to add a bend in the elbow.

Draw two ears on the head just as they appear in the example image. There are many different styles of cartoon dogs that you could draw and the ears are one part that you can experiment with to get many different species of dogs.

From the curve that we drew in the first step draw a stretched out and flattened "W" shape to make the top of the mouth. Keep extending the line a little bit further and let a curve up backing towards the head to make the nose area.

This step is a little bit tricky to explain, so please look closely at the example image and try to draw as closely to the example as possible.

Step 3 - Things are Starting to Take Shape

Once again we’ll start at the bottom and work our way up by drawing the feet first.

TIP - Usually when I draw feet I will start at the ankle, draw the top of the foot, and then connect the heel to the toes with a straight line.

Draw the tail with simple curves behind the left leg. Just like the ears you can change the dog species by experimenting with different styles of tails.

Use simple curved lines to draw in the waving hand and the other hand that is resting along his side.

To make the nose first draw a line up from the middle point of the upper lip "W" shape you made in the last step and then draw an upside down and slightly rounded triangle at the end of this line. Finish off the mouth by adding a second line around the bottom of the mouth to create the bottom lip.

Step 4 - Finishing Up

This time we're going to work from the top down to the bottom. Fill in the inside of the ears and then draw two circles for eyes. Add upward slanting eyebrows on top for eyes to make the dog look friendly.

Cartoon dogs need paws so add three small circles and a larger rounded square to the hand that's waving to make it really look like a paw. Add some small lines to the other hand and to both feet to show that the paw isn't just one solid object - that it has toes or fingers.

The last thing to draw is the chest. Make this by drawing a curve that goes from the side of the mouth down towards the midsection on both sides of the body and you’re finished!

I hope you enjoyed learning how to draw cartoon dogs.

Freelancer ?

Freelancer ?

A freelancer or freelance worker is a person who pursues a profession without a long-term commitment to any one employer. The term "freelance" was first coined by Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) in his well-known historical romance Ivanhoe to describe a "medieval mercenary warrior" (or "free-lance"). The phrase later transitioned to a figurative noun around the 1860s and was then officially recognized as a verb in 1903 by various authorities in etymology such as the Oxford English Dictionary. Only in modern times has the term morphed from a noun (a freelance) into an adjective (a freelance journalist), various verb forms (a journalist who freelances) and an adverb (she worked freelance), and then from the verb into the derived noun form "freelancer".

The author and poet Ernest William Hornung (1866 - 1921) also used the term in "The Gift of the Emperor" to describe something of poor quality: "I warmed to my woes. It was no easy matter to keep your end up as a raw freelance of letters; for my part, I was afraid I wrote neither well enough nor ill enough for success."

Fields where freelancing is especially common include journalism and other forms of writing, copywriting, computer programming and graphic design, consulting, and many other professional and creative services.

The Internet has opened up many freelance opportunities, expanding markets and helping to build it into one of the largest economic segments for many economies. Development for freelancing has been especially high for software development, website design, information technology, and business documentation.

Freelance practice varies greatly. Some require clients to sign written contracts, while others may perform work based on verbal agreements, perhaps enforceable through the very nature of the work. Some freelancers may provide written estimates of work and request deposits from clients.

Payment for freelance work also varies greatly. Freelancers may charge by the day or hour, or on a per-project basis. Instead of a flat rate or fee, some consultants have adopted a value-based pricing method based on the perceived value of the results to the client. By custom, payment arrangements may be upfront, percentage upfront, or upon completion. For more complex projects, a contract may set a payment schedule based on milestones or outcomes.


Freelancing on the Internet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Selasa, 25 Maret 2008














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Best Regards,
Alfonsus Yori
www.alfyori.com