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File: 1415543934603.png (175.16 KB, 676x705, 676:705, study.PNG)

 No.1418

Is there such a thing as an 'anatomy cheatsheet'? I am thinking of something similar to syntax cheatsheets for programming languages, which are quite nice for learning a language while you're using it. The idea is I could cross reference this stuff while studying photographs, perhaps learning what the thing I'm looking at is called, without drowning in information (which is what happens when I glance into anatomy books)

I imagine they would not have too much scope, but just be limited to a particular body part or group.

Any website links that you folks know of?

 No.1434

Why don't you make one yourself, anon? I'm sure it'd be a good learning experience

 No.1435

There are some guidelines out there like that a face is five eyes wide, adults are seven heads tall, the length of the arms from fingertip to fingertip is the height of the body etc. DaVinci had a lot of observations about the size of body parts in relation to the whole, so you could look into his sketchbooks for ones you like.

 No.1439

>>1434

You're probably right. The reluctance to get my feet wet is a problem. De personality failure.

 No.2063

File: 1420263592935.png (375.73 KB, 1269x2321, 1269:2321, Skeleton_diag[1].png)

>>1418
there is i call it.....the skeleton

 No.2066

>>2063

How do you feel about replica skulls, other bones?

 No.2071

There are plenty of guide lines and rules and proportions and such that people use. If you haven't already, try Loomis. Fun with a Pencil if you're completely new or Figure Drawing for All It's Worth if you aren't. All in all, you end up just having to build up your own understanding and an approach that works for you (and often tearing it down and building up something more detailed.)



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