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The Basic Forms: A Sphere As The Cranium

The document discusses simplifying the head into its basic forms for drawing from any angle. [1] The head can be deconstructed into a sphere for the cranium and a block for the jaw and cheek bones. [2] It describes dividing the spherical cranium into quadrants using horizontal and vertical lines and attaching the block shape of the jaw. [3] It provides steps for constructing the head from any angle which includes determining the angle of the spherical cranium and dividing it into thirds to properly place the features.

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Raj Roy
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
538 views5 pages

The Basic Forms: A Sphere As The Cranium

The document discusses simplifying the head into its basic forms for drawing from any angle. [1] The head can be deconstructed into a sphere for the cranium and a block for the jaw and cheek bones. [2] It describes dividing the spherical cranium into quadrants using horizontal and vertical lines and attaching the block shape of the jaw. [3] It provides steps for constructing the head from any angle which includes determining the angle of the spherical cranium and dividing it into thirds to properly place the features.

Uploaded by

Raj Roy
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Basic Forms

To draw the head from any angle you must first understand its basic structure. Look past all the distracting details and
visualize the underlying forms. This ability to simplify can be applied to the features of the face, but when starting the
drawing you could look even further. Ignore even the features and simplify to the most basic form of the head. I use a
method taught by Andrew Loomis in his book, “Drawing the Head & Hands”.

The head deconstructed into its basic forms, is a sphere as the cranium and a block as the jaw and cheek bones.

A Sphere as the Cranium


The sides of the head are flat, so we can slice off a piece from both sides of the ball. From profile, this plane will be a
perfect circle, but when drawing it from any other angle, it will appear to be an oval because of perspective. Divide this
oval into quadrants. The vertical line represents the beginning of the jaw. The horizontal line represents the brow line.
The top and bottom of the oval help you find the hair line and the bottom of the nose.

A Block as the Jaw and Cheek Bones

Attach the shape of the jaw. The top will start at the brow line and the back will start at the center of the oval. This is a
3-D volume with a front plane, side planes, and bottom plane (bottom plane is seen from some angles).

Constructing From Any Angle

Step 1 - Determine the angle of the ball

The angle of the head is established at the very beginning of the drawing with the ball. All three axes must be
addressed:
X Axis - The up and down tilt is established by the angles of the horizontal and vertical lines in the oval. Also, on
extreme up tilts and down tilts, the thirds will be foreshortened because of perspective.

Y Axis - The direction the head is turning (left or right) is established by the width of the oval. As the head turns
towards you, you can see more of the front of the face and less of the side, so the oval representing the side will get
narrower. Similarly, when the head turns away from you, more of the side plane is revealed and the oval will appear
wider.

Z Axis - The twist is established by the angle of the center line, the angle of the oval andthe placement of the oval on
the ball.
Step 2 - Find the thirds

After establishing the angle of the ball, divide the face into thirds. The distance between the hairline and brow-line
should be the same as the distance between the brow-line and bottom of the nose. Add that same distance to find the
chin. Notice how the  hairline and nose-line align with the top and bottom bottom of the oval when wrapped around the
face. Imagine the head as a box. The thirds must be wrapped around the side plane and front plane.

Step 3 - Add the jaw


A common mistake at this point is to make the jaw too long in comparison to the ball. Make sure to measure your
thirds correctly and that they relate correctly to the ball. Notice how the shape of the jaw changes from various angles.

Step 4 - Add the features

With this basic structure properly established, it becomes much easier to add the features in the right place. Check
back for more information about specific features in a later post.

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