LetSleepingGodsLieFeatured By OwnerAug 30, 2008 Traditional Artist
Practice practice practice practice practice and then practice more. Study real life, and then study artists whose drawn hands you like. Copy them, and then innovate on their style so it's your own.
I studied Steve Ditko and McFarlane hands, as well as just random comics I found. It helps.
thanks a bunch. You have this ANSWERED this question. I shall do that. I never really thought about juts copying hands, until you get the basics, and then just to do it your way. I'm writing this down!
LetSleepingGodsLieFeatured By OwnerAug 31, 2008 Traditional Artist
Yeah. No real secret, just practice. Find an artist you like, copy him/her and then (this part is crucial) innovate on that style and make it your own.
“I'm self-taught, been drawing since I was a little kid (and only drawing fairly well for the past couple years) and my partner Nam Kim is a great help. All the characters you see in the book, the layout, the story, that's all me. Nam handles most of the background details and tedious technical details---I'm just not neat enough nor am I skilled enough to do that yet… But I have a strict policy that no one can touch or alter the characters themselves---nothing about them can be changed, even if it's just a tweak to improve something technical, so that's all me.”
Devious Comments
I studied Steve Ditko and McFarlane hands, as well as just random comics I found. It helps.
Well apparently you didn't do the last part. o3o
his interview mania.com: [link]
Great work dumbass, you practically exposed yourself here.