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7/30/25 Rukus (reference photo by Katelyn This) |
Bright-eyed Rukus is in the same family as Jett and Maggie.
Something tells me that this little guy is a handful (perhaps his name is a clue)!
I’ve often talked about the many things I’ve learned from my long and now-large series of pet portraits (nearly a hundred are in my Flickr album). I’m probably repeating some thoughts here, but I wanted to list what I have found to be some of the most important characteristics of realistic pet portraiture. If you feel like drawing pets, maybe some of these tips will be helpful.
- I can’t stress this enough: Get a well-lighted, in-focus
reference photo. It often helps to have multiple images of the animal from
different angles, in case some information is unclear in your primary
reference.
- The eyes are critical. Humans and their pets (maybe
especially dogs) spend a lot of time making eye contact, so the eyes have to be
right, or the human won’t feel the connection. I spend more time on the eyes
than I do on any other feature or all that fur.
- As in portrait photography,
a super-important part of the eyes is the catchlight. If thereference photo
doesn’t have one, I will fake it – it’s that important in conveying life in the
eyes.
- I can’t remember whose class it was (maybe Gary Faigin’s)
or which book I read, but here’s a tip about drawing eyes (human, but it
applies to animals, too) that has stayed with me: The upper eyelid always makes
a subtle shadow on the top of the eyeball. A good reference photo will show
this, and if you learn to look for it, you will observe it, even if it’s subtle.
The tip I learned said that beginner portrait artists will often draw the eye
as if the entire iris is visible, but it is almost always partially obscured by
that shadow. If you nail that, the eyes will look more realistic.
- With dogs, almost as important as the catchlight are the subtle
reflections on the lower edge of the nostrils. It’s not a bright highlight, as
the nose is not shiny, but it is always moist, which creates the reflection.
- Here’s a helpful dog tip I learned from Sketching Scottie: In life-drawing classes and books, we always learn that the average human face has about one eye width between our eyes. In dogs, the space is two eye widths. I measure every time, and it’s true! Well, as in human anatomy, it’s a general guideline, not a universal rule. I’m working on a dog portrait now whose eyes are much farther apart than two eye widths. And the face must be straight head-on like Rukus is here, with no angle, to measure it accurately. But it is helpful to understand basic anatomical structures.
Great tips on pet portraits! It’s so interesting to see the different pets you are capturing in your portraits.
ReplyDeleteI have learned so much from each portrait... and no matter how many dogs (or cats) of a certain breed I sketch, each is unique!
DeleteInteresting note about the difference between human and dog eye spacing. I can think of some googly eyed breeds that might exceed the norm!
ReplyDeleteIndeed, I think lots of breeds are outside the norm! Maybe the ones with eyes closer together look more human? ;-)
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