When drawing, it's important to understand foreshortening and depth of space. Your designs are good, and you seem to know how to shade, so let me help you out with some tips:
Foreshortening: When you want things to look like they are coming forward, make them gradually get wider (for example, an arm that you want to reach toward the viewer starts at it's propertional or "right" size at the shoulder, then the arm slopes wider until the hand, at the end of the arm, looks significantly larger than the rest of the body). This also works in the opposite direction(hand is small, arm slopes inward)
Depth of field/space: here are a few rules to try:
1. Larger or closer things take up more space.
2. Closer things are closer to the bottom of the page.
3. Things with darker shading appear farther away.
Sorry for giving you so much to read :/
Hope to see improvement! :D
TheEntertainer
When drawing, it's important to understand foreshortening and depth of space. Your designs are good, and you seem to know how to shade, so let me help you out with some tips:
Foreshortening: When you want things to look like they are coming forward, make them gradually get wider (for example, an arm that you want to reach toward the viewer starts at it's propertional or "right" size at the shoulder, then the arm slopes wider until the hand, at the end of the arm, looks significantly larger than the rest of the body). This also works in the opposite direction(hand is small, arm slopes inward)
Depth of field/space: here are a few rules to try:
1. Larger or closer things take up more space.
2. Closer things are closer to the bottom of the page.
3. Things with darker shading appear farther away.
Sorry for giving you so much to read :/
Hope to see improvement! :D