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  • Let's talk about balance!

  • To balance a pose you need to think of what's known as the center of gravity. When you take

  • the mass of the figure and drop a line down to the ground, the support (commonly the feet)

  • need to be on that point or evenly spread around that point If the weight is evenly

  • distributed among the feet. If most of the weight is on the left leg and some on the

  • right, the center of gravity will be closer to the left foot. As the weight shifts over

  • to the other foot, the torso will follow that line.

  • A lot of sources say to drop a line from pit of neck, nose, eyes, ears.. I think it's better

  • to imagine the large mass (hips and rib cage) and drop a line from the center of that mass.

  • Usually you'll see it somewhere in the midsection depending on the pose.

  • Dropping a vertical line down from the midsection shows that this drawing is unbalanced. We

  • can rotate it until the vertical line falls between the two feet. Adjust the angles of

  • the feet to match the perspective of the ground. And that looks much better.

  • In a balanced pose, the weight of the body needs to be balanced and supported by either

  • one leg or distributed evenly or unevenly between both legs. Or distributed among any

  • combination of body parts like a foot and a knee. Or both knees and both hands. Even

  • lying down with the weight on hips and elbow. Leaning against a wall or sitting down on

  • a chair or couch. Don't forget about props like a cane or umbrella, which is very much

  • like another leg.

  • Not all poses you draw will be balanced though. Only static poses will be balanced. An active

  • pose, a pose in motion, is not balanced. Walking for example is just a series of controlled

  • falls. With each step we catch ourselves and push forward for the next fall.

  • Someone pretending to run by holding a running position is different from a real running

  • position. In a real run the center of gravity is not supported by the bottom leg. The center

  • of gravity is in front of the legs. This momentum is pushing the body forward. In a fake running

  • pose the person needs to be balanced and so the center of gravity is directly above the

  • supporting foot.

  • When drawing from a live model, all the poses will be balanced because they have to hold

  • the pose. This might be one advantage of adding drawing from a photo to your list of exercises.

  • Photos can capture a figure in motion. Practicing these types of poses along with balanced poses

  • from a model will help you to develop a sense for motion and momentum. Breaking balance

  • can be used to tell a different story. Storyboarders, comic artists, illustrators, all need to know

  • how to draw interesting, dynamic poses which are very difficult for a model to hold for

  • a long time.

  • Another great exercise would be to take a balanced pose and use it as inspiration to

  • create an action pose - a pose that is in the middle of an action. This one for example.

  • I'll rotate the body a little more as if she's diving and change the limbs a little to show

  • she's diving for the ball.

  • In the end though it really comes down to making it feel balanced. If you did all the

  • measuring and thought about 20 percent here, 80 percent here and you planned as much as

  • you could, but it doesn't look balanced. Well then it needs to be fixed. If it looks wrong,

  • it's wrong! It's so hard to confidently say that you measured everything and took all

  • the parts into consideration because it's all an illusion and there are way too many

  • things to consider. You can't think of everything. There might be another element in the drawing

  • that makes the illusion seem a little more like this or like that. So, planning and measuring

  • will get you only so far. Then you have to trust your best judgment. Train your mind

  • to be able to see those kinds of mistakes and be able to catch mistakes using your intuition.

  • You look at a drawing and instantly know what should be changed. It's a feeling. It's not

  • math. But, you develop that intuition by studying the math.

  • You can call this "designing". You're changing things for the purpose of making it look better,

  • more pleasing to the eye. Whether you're changing things about a photo, live model, or a sketch

  • you did from your imagination, you're designing.

  • A great example of making something feel balanced by making it less accurate is the font Helvetica.

  • Look at the letter T. It's designed to feel as though the horizontal and vertical lines

  • are the same thickness. But when you compare the two, you'll see that the horizontal is

  • actually thinner. If they were both the same, the top would feel too thick and heavy. I

  • suppose the "Designers" of the Helvetica font decided to go against precision to make it

  • feel better.

  • Alternating Angles of Masses

  • In a static "soldier alert" pose the body is symmetrical. Unless you're drawing a soldier,

  • the body won't be in a symmetrical state like that though. Usually you'll see alternating

  • angles of the masses stacked one on top of the other, following a rhythm. In a relaxed

  • standing pose, the weight isn't evenly distributed between the feet and the leg that supports

  • most of the weight pushes that side of the pelvis up and the other side drops. To counterbalance

  • this, the rib cage rotates the other way creating the opposite angle in the shoulders. Think

  • of these as stacked blocks that balance each other out. If you're good at Jenga, you might

  • be good at drawing a balanced pose.

  • This week instead of having a premium version of this lesson, I have an additional premium

  • lesson showing how to exaggerate a pose. I introduce a step by step method that makes

  • it easier to take a rigid pose and develop into something more dynamic. Or you could

  • use the same approach to create your own poses based on poses from photos.

  • I've also included a collection of a few photos with 2 versions of the same pose. One rigid

  • and another more dynamic one. You can try exaggerating the rigid ones and check your

  • drawing against the dynamic version.

  • So if you want to see that lesson and extended versions of all the other lessons from the

  • Figure Drawing Fundamentals series, go to proko.com/figure.

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Let's talk about balance!

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