English, asked by devendra0907, 7 months ago

How to draw animal's fur and hairs ( explain in steps)​

Answers

Answered by k2805
1

Explanation:

How to Draw Feathers

This post is part of a series called How to Draw Textures.

How to Draw Glass

How to Draw Fabric: Silk and Wool

Final product image

What You'll Be Creating

Drawing fur from imagination can be very frustrating. You've seen it, you know what it is, but when you try drawing it, you end up with a bunch of straw.

If this is your problem, in this tutorial I will show you how to solve it. First hint? You need to draw what you see, not what you know!

What You Will Need

Sheets of paper

HB pencil

2B pencil

4B pencil

Mechanical HB pencil

Blending stump (or cotton swab)

Kneaded eraser (or normal eraser)

Tools youll need

1. What Is Fur?

With start with some theory. You'll be able to draw pencil fur much better just by learning these few simple facts!

First, fur is made of hairs that lie one upon another, creating a smooth surface. However, when the surface they lie on bends, they start to clump—the individual hairs are grouped.

how fur bends

The lighter the hairs, the easier they get clumped

This "clumping" can occur in all dimensions, creating either "waves" of hair or small separate clumps.

clumps of fur

We can see everything because of contrast between light and shadow. The bigger the clumps, the bigger the shadow between them.

how fur is shaded

When you draw fur by drawing individual hairs, what you're really drawing is skin illuminated from below, with hairs blocking the light. That's why it looks so odd!

why is drawing fur so hard

So the big secret is: to draw convincing fur with a pencil, you need to draw not the hairs/clumps, but the shadows between them.

In fact, that's how you should always approach drawing. We draw light and shadow, and nothing more. A single hair can be similar to a simple pencil stroke, but you can't draw fur by drawing a lot of simple strokes!

how to draw fur secret

drawing fur technique

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Answered by Tanucoco
2

Answer:

Ironically, fluffy fur often looks homogeneous or "flat" (see the white areas on the second close-up above). It's hard to see the individual strands when you're dealing with fluff. Those little strands of fur show up best in the places where the animal is bending and forming creases. That's because the folds make the fur look darker (as in the first close-up above).

To get that effect in your drawing, shade the areas, and draw small lines and "V" shapes to suggest individual hairs.

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