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Video instructions and help with filling out and completing How Form 8865 Proportional

Instructions and Help about How Form 8865 Proportional

Get allies and German welcome to draw with Jazza. I'm jazzer, and in this video, we're going to be talking about constructing the human body for an illustration. Now, when I say constructing, I essentially mean building it from the ground up or from the bones up, and we'll get to that in a moment. But first, I want to talk about something I've spent a lot of time and work on. So if you're interested in checking out my recently released ebook called "Draw with Jazza Easy Anatomy," which is very much related to what we're going to be talking about today, it goes into a lot more detail and it has a separate exercise book where you can print it out, do the exercises yourself, and practice this stuff. There's also an Anatomy reference pack, which has hundreds of poses of this male and female character here. So I just thought I'd get that out of the way. The link is on the screen and in the description. Go check it out if you're interested. Otherwise, let's get started. Now, the topic of this video is specifically construction. When I say construction, I mean when you're going to draw a figure like this, you're not going to start off with the details. You're not going to start off with the outline and the structures and the details. We're going to build things bit by bit. And what we start off with is this, a skeleton, right? But we don't actually literally start off with a skeleton like this. We start off with a skeleton breakdown, and that's what I call construction lines. And a lot of people use them. The reason we use construction lines in a drawing is because if I started off with, let's say, just the...