Career after 12th standard is full of options. In such condition, from amongst all the fields they are good at, the students need to figure out what will suit them the most when it comes to building a career. It is to evaluate their strengths and weaknesses, likings, aptitude and interest and to give them a clear direction towards their goal we have designed our curriculum.
• We would like to make students aware and emphasise the fact that a career in Design is independent of any particular subject.
• For Architecture Colleges Students from any stream with Maths can join the curriculum .
• NID, NIFT and some of the Other Designing colleges accept students from all streams in their Design curriculum. Science is however required for programmes like B.F.Tech etc.
Unlocking the Power of ChatGPT and AI in Testing - A Real-World Look, present...
How to draw human faces ( For B.Arch, NID, NIFT etc)
1. How to Draw
Human Faces
Studio
Sreejanshilpa
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2.
Draw an oval slightly wider
at the top than
bottom. Lightly sketch a
vertical line down the
center, then draw a
horizontal line halfway
between the top and
bottom of the oval. This line
will give you the eye
placement. Divide the
remaining space below in
half and make a line there.
This will be for the base of
the average-length nose.
Divide the space below that
into thirds. The mouth will be
at the top of those thirds;
the rest will be the chin.
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3.
On the middle horizontal
line, draw two almond
shapes - these are the eyes.
On an anatomically correct
face, five eyes fit across the
span of the face, with the
length of an eye fitting in
between the two that will
be drawn. Starting from the
left, the eyes we want are
the second and fourth. The
inner corner of most eyes
tilts down; the outer corner
can tilt up or down,
depending. For our
purposes, that outside
corner should tilt up a bit, so
that the line that describes
the bottom lid looks like a
very slight "s" shape on its
side.
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4. Down
the center line,
draw a nose. The nose
is narrowest between
the eyes and widest at
the nostrils. Notice how
the tip turns under.
Everyone's nose is
unique, and if you are
doing a portrait,
capturing someone's
nose exactly will give
your drawing more
authority.
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5. Go
back up to the top
horizontal line. On either
side of this, draw ears.
Notice that the ears stick
out wider at the top and
then come in near the
lobes. Some lobes are
attached and some are
loose. Ears are pretty
complicated to draw keep them simple at first
until you get an idea of
their construction.
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6.
Add a mouth. Make a
flat, rounded "V" shape
that is dips below the
lowest line. That will be
the bottom of the lower
lip. Join that smile line
with a wide, soft "M"
shape—the top of the
upper lip. Draw a very
soft "m" shape between
the two, which defines
the separation of the lips,
and the lip ratio. Moving
the mouth up or down,
and making the top and
bottom lips with different
proportions will help vary
the look of the face
you're drawing.
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7. Drawing
the hair. Hair is
hard to draw, but start
off with lines
(remember, this is line
drawing). Is the hair
straight? Parallel lines
curving around the
head. Is the hair curly?
Curved lines. Notice
how curly hair breaks
into clumps composed
of parallel strands.
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8. Finish
with the
neck. The neck is
thicker than we like to
think. The sides start at
the top of the jaw line
and go down on a
curve.
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9. Add
a collar or
neckline of some
sort. You can add a
shirt, jacket,
turtleneck—even
nothing at all. The type
of clothing you add will
give your drawing
some sense of time and
place.
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