Just like my remade Undead merchant, wanted to update my taurus demon fumo. Based on the newer drawing I did for my avatar.
Commissions are open, check out my kofi: https://ko-fi.com/minespatch
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I've been trying to find a way to help draw people in perspective, and have ended up finding this. Ive been using it for a while as I've been trying to streamline it, and I'm happy with how they turn out.
The way you use these is by first grabbing one of the blank images, drawing a side view of what you want to draw in the area at the bottom, and use that to help draw in the big area at the top. The lines at the top correlate with the lines at the bottom. So if the top of the head is on the second line in the bottom area, then you draw the top of the head on the second line in the top area, if the bottom of the head is between the forth and fifth line at the bottom, then you draw the bottom of the head between the forth and the fifth line at the top, and so on.
Some lines being red is just there to help with counting, and the grid in the background at the top is there to help you draw environments.
You should be able to move things from side to side without having to worry too much about distortion. The only thing it will affect is the distance between objects, so be careful when doing it with different body parts, otherwise the proportions might get a bit wonky.
These take a lot of effort to make, and the current method I use for making them uses an advanced perspective setup, so I probably won't walk you through it until I've covered that (at least, they do take a lot of effort if you want the grid in the background, if you don't then you could just draw some lines moving away from a point, and some horizontal lines above it). However, once you've made one then they're easy to reuse, so I've decided to share some rough ones I've made to gather some feedback. I'm currently looking for things to help with readability, stuff like line density and color pallet. I'd also like to know what you think about the layout, should they be on top of eachother or should they maybe be next to each other, and how big should everything be?
If you try this out then I would like to see how it goes and what you think.
Anyway, here's some more images I've made with them:

Here I tried it out with a more simple drawing. This technique doesn't tell you how wide things should be, so I often try to break things down into spheres that are as wide as they are tall to make things easier. That's what the red circles on the bottom image are for.

Here I tried it out with a face. I had a hard time making the top face recognizable as the bottom face.

Dog.
Another one for the ptsd collection.
I'll be sure spamming this when I start shadow of the erd tree.
Commissions are open, check out my kofi: https://ko-fi.com/minespatch
Dragons are hatched limbless, resembling a snake with some odd but ignorable protrusions where their spikes and fins will grow. By the end of their childhood, these features will be much more noticeable, if still pitifully small. To grow into their grand, limbed adult forms, the dragonets undergo a decade long brumation in small earthen cavities they carve out. This dragonet seems to have been undergoing this slumber for a year or so, as it has only just started to grow its legs.