![]() |
Drawing of Keira
1 Attachment(s)
Here's a Keira drawing I've made. :D
|
nice try, keep'em coming
|
Err...unique.
|
It's a bit shit.
|
Blunter than I was going for...but alrighty :)
|
bad, but 100 times better than anything i could do :).
perhaps instead of trying to draw her entire body ( almost ), spend more time on doing say her head, giving it more detail and trying to make it look as realistic as you can. |
Come on guys, a little bit of constructive criticism would be nice. Not just nasty comments. Ardnax, thats very good for a first try. I like the shading on her stomach, and you've got the clothes right. If you wanted it to be more accurate, you could try adding more detail to her face. :) Good try!
|
Thanks Sarah, I felt some tears coming... Just kidding. I never said it was good did I? Besides, Keira is to perfect for me to draw. I'm not so good.
|
yeah sarahs rite its great i think you drew it from the disnyland pirates of the caribbean prermiere am i rite?!!!!!!
|
Quote:
|
that drawing is fab i bet anyone could tell who that was straight away
|
awwwwww! Thanks Ellie!
|
thats ok! its a really great drawing the necklace looks kool!
|
Quote:
|
Picking on a 14 year old girl...how manly...
|
I'm a 14 year old boy, so its manly for me. Nice abs, but bad face. As Narg said, try drawing the face properly instead of body.
|
Quote:
And it's not picking on anyone...it's called humour...sense of humour transplant needed stat... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
sarcasm •n. the use of irony to mock or convey contempt. - DERIVATIVES sarcastic adj. sarcastically adv. - ORIGIN C16: from Fr. sarcasme, or via late L. from late Gk sarkasmos, from Gk sarkazein 'tear flesh', in late Gk 'gnash the teeth, speak bitterly' (from sarx, sark- 'flesh'). Now...that would fit...if my comment had been ironic...let's define irony, shall we? irony1 / 'rni/ •n. (pl. ironies) the expression of meaning through the use of language signifying the opposite, typically for humorous effect. →a state of affairs that appears perversely contrary to what one expects. → (also dramatic or tragic irony) a literary technique, originally used in Greek tragedy, by which the significance of a character's words or actions are clear to the audience or reader although unknown to the character. - ORIGIN C16: via L. from Gk eirneia 'simulated ignorance', from eirn 'dissembler'. Now...my comment wasn't ironic in the slightest...and thus wasn't sarcastic...it was bluntly honest...there IS a difference (sarcasm actually requires use of opposites...so "Wow, that's really really good...you should be like a famous painter or something..." would be more sarcastic) Maybe you should learn to use a dictionary before you go to LSE, eh? They are a bunch of intellectually vain twats at that place, so you're unlikely to fit in if you don't know how to use a dictionary. |
Quote:
If you had half a brain, you would have realized that I was referring to the comment I originally made in post 15. But thank you for showing viewers how to use the Internet to access a dictionary. |
| All times are GMT. The time now is 11:52 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
By appointment to HM Keira Knightley.