As a beginner I think Michael Hampton's book is fantastic. I've been working my way through his book page by page, section by section, and he builds solid fundamentals and provides a really good "here's form drawings, here's dynamic poses, here's adding volume, let's look at a skeleton, now the muscles" building blocks so not only do you get better you build a better understanding of how the body fits together. Haven't read any of the others, but if you suck at drawing people and want to get better without just focusing on hands and feet and faces, Hampton's book is worth its weight in gold.
Thanks for the nice reviews, I have all three books and like them a lot too. FYI, Michel Lauricella sutied at Paris Beaux-Arts National School. Being french is first name is pronounced like "Michelle" in english , and cell in his lastname is pronounced like "cell" in english.
Were you a beginner? Intermediate? Prior to starting the book? I'm in between the two and thought about studying this book. Any reviews/ thoughts on this michael Hampton book?
@sotoeddie18 I was more of an intermediate and I had prior finished iliya mirochinks russian academic drawing from nma and dynamic sketching and then went on to study hampton. You need a good base and know how to work with basic forms to understand the book better. Hell the 1st chapter of the book which is gesture took me almost 1.5 - 2 months to full understand the process. Its not easy but once you get the hand of it ,it gets pretty formulaic and easy
For me personally, Michael Hamptons book is the best, Loomis's figure drawing book was just too complex and not that well explained imo, it just seems to have fancy drawings with little to no guidance of how to get to that point. Its like one of those step 1 draw a line and step 2 draw a full rendered human. Might be an unpopular opinion but yeah, the only value i got from it was the proportions and basic skeleton. Havent tried his head and hands book but I'll go for it. Also I hate to say this because you really should support these teachers but if you are really broke and desperate to learn... figure drawing design and invention as well as figure drawing for all its worth and how to draw the head and hands can be downloaded as pdfs from google for free.
@@janelle0619 Michael hamptons book is so much better I think. It shows you the shape and basic form of pretty much every major mass and minor mass and if you already know basic forms and volumes then its definitely the most helpful in terms of learning basic or even advanced anatomy. I like loomis's stuff with the skeleton but he doesnt really have anything for anatomy practice tbh.
It's not that Loomis is a bad book per say. It's just marketed by the art community incorrectly. It is not a beginners book. You need your fundamentals down to really get it.
I will say that it's alot more helpful to have the book in physical form when it comes to art & drawing books. I would NEVER convert pdf pages to jpg & printed them off myself though 👀🤥
@@birdy369 I definitely agree that it's better to have the tangible book for drawing purposes, but having a (free) online resource is also handy for broke people like me right now 🥲
I’ve been drawing off reference for about a year now, but I’ve never really bothered to learn anatomy but I want to know to expand my expertise on art, which one would you recommend?
What are your thoughts on the Charles Bargue drawing course book? Would you recommend it as a starting point for beginners? If yes, please discuss the pros and cons of this popular resource for aspiring artists.
I have 4 of the morpho anatomy books but I don't know how to use the books input into actual practice, how do I do that? Some of the books barely have words.
I'm going to buy these books from a used bookstore so not only you don't get any of the money through an affiliate link but the artist sees no money either cuz that's the way the ghost rolls
I would just watch the video loomis method because I bought his book it's extremely hard to understand in the way it's written . there's no exercises or anything so if you're a beginner you're not going to know what he's talking about
Strange how there are no black or asian heads in Loomis' books 🤔 As someone once pointed out to me, just because he's an old geaser from before modern culture doesn't make him the cream of the crop. Better to just use Morpho and or youtube tutorials than that old racist (by modern standards, he was probably a nice teacher. But it's better to learn from someone who actually teaches diversity in art with contemporary understanding.)
I don't think aisan, black or any race's anatomy has such a major difference that it needs it's own category, plus it's a beginner's book so it shouldn't really have detailed difference in races. PS: im not saying that being white is the default form of a human. im just saying that a beginners book shouldn't cover minute details.
@@CVM5LVT I agree. Since it's for beginners you gotta make it simple for a beginner so they don't feel overwhelmed if they get overwhelmed they'll quit or fail
@@CVM5LVT That's literally what he wants to point out. The author of the book not showing different "racial groups" and people like you not noticing HOW IMPORTANT that is are part of the problem. Body masses are distributed a bit different amongst different human groups, most Chinese women don't have the same body types as Indian women, afrocolombian wom3n or Congolese wom3n. In fact if we dig dipper Congolese, cameroonese and Ethiopian wom3n doesn't have the same body type and face structure... You just need to analyze how even 20 years ago people would go through hell and back just to get the huge variety of monolid eyes, different types of black African facial structures, afro hair, skin tones... etc right while drawing. All this just made it more clear that white sprmcy didn't fade away, it destroyed info about any other human group that wasn't "ar1an white". Books like this only add to that mess... I think you should educate yourself a bit about this. Human beings shouldn't need to learn from one standardized version of their own species and then make an EXTRA EFFORT to draw "everyone else". Is that simple.
@@SantaceBagheera actually if you read the book. The author does tell you play around with proportions and bone structure to get different looks. There is no said...extra effort.
@@gtrrohit5078 that doesnt change any of the words I said. Thats doesn't change the fact that, non white people have been forced to "play around" to get things that white people got with way less effort. Such as being the standard for everything including drawing tips.
I draw sometimes. Do you?
no
🥲
*Nod*
yep
Yes
As a beginner I think Michael Hampton's book is fantastic. I've been working my way through his book page by page, section by section, and he builds solid fundamentals and provides a really good "here's form drawings, here's dynamic poses, here's adding volume, let's look at a skeleton, now the muscles" building blocks so not only do you get better you build a better understanding of how the body fits together. Haven't read any of the others, but if you suck at drawing people and want to get better without just focusing on hands and feet and faces, Hampton's book is worth its weight in gold.
Solid tip. I suck at drawing people
i've tried the michael hampton book as a pdf, and it actually helped me practice more and better my anatomy skills. :)
A detached spine on a small book that would continually try to close is PERFECT (Morpho books).
The morpho book spines are intentional!!!
This is THEEEE video I needed omfg 😭✨
The spine is detached so you can lay it flat while drawing
Which one?
@@corncab9525 they all are as far as I know I have several and they are all the same
@@kingkoopa187 I see
@@corncab9525 the morpho ones
They all are except for Anatomy For Artists. Rest of the series lies flat
Thanks for the nice reviews, I have all three books and like them a lot too.
FYI, Michel Lauricella sutied at Paris Beaux-Arts National School. Being french is first name is pronounced like "Michelle" in english , and cell in his lastname is pronounced like "cell" in english.
Muchas gracias por las recomendaciones ☺️.
You’re welcome! I hope they help 😄
i hope you remember me when you get famous 😩😩like man you edit well and give useful tips! keep it up :))))
Thank you for the book recommendations.
The spine is 100% ok. It is made that way on purpose so that the book will lay flat while open. All bookmasters know this.
I finished the entire hampton book and it changed my life
Were you a beginner? Intermediate? Prior to starting the book? I'm in between the two and thought about studying this book. Any reviews/ thoughts on this michael Hampton book?
@sotoeddie18 I was more of an intermediate and I had prior finished iliya mirochinks russian academic drawing from nma and dynamic sketching and then went on to study hampton. You need a good base and know how to work with basic forms to understand the book better. Hell the 1st chapter of the book which is gesture took me almost 1.5 - 2 months to full understand the process. Its not easy but once you get the hand of it ,it gets pretty formulaic and easy
@@sotoeddie18 to understand the book better watch his anatomy lectures trust me it helps immensely and if u need more help you can ask me
For me personally, Michael Hamptons book is the best, Loomis's figure drawing book was just too complex and not that well explained imo, it just seems to have fancy drawings with little to no guidance of how to get to that point. Its like one of those step 1 draw a line and step 2 draw a full rendered human. Might be an unpopular opinion but yeah, the only value i got from it was the proportions and basic skeleton. Havent tried his head and hands book but I'll go for it.
Also I hate to say this because you really should support these teachers but if you are really broke and desperate to learn... figure drawing design and invention as well as figure drawing for all its worth and how to draw the head and hands can be downloaded as pdfs from google for free.
i agree
@@janelle0619 Michael hamptons book is so much better I think. It shows you the shape and basic form of pretty much every major mass and minor mass and if you already know basic forms and volumes then its definitely the most helpful in terms of learning basic or even advanced anatomy. I like loomis's stuff with the skeleton but he doesnt really have anything for anatomy practice tbh.
It's not that Loomis is a bad book per say. It's just marketed by the art community incorrectly. It is not a beginners book. You need your fundamentals down to really get it.
I will say that it's alot more helpful to have the book in physical form when it comes to art & drawing books.
I would NEVER convert pdf pages to jpg & printed them off myself though 👀🤥
@@birdy369 I definitely agree that it's better to have the tangible book for drawing purposes, but having a (free) online resource is also handy for broke people like me right now 🥲
I’ve been drawing off reference for about a year now, but I’ve never really bothered to learn anatomy but I want to know to expand my expertise on art, which one would you recommend?
What are your thoughts on the Charles Bargue drawing course book? Would you recommend it as a starting point for beginners? If yes, please discuss the pros and cons of this popular resource for aspiring artists.
Whole heatedly thank you🥰
morpho spine designed that way so u can lay it flat open
Would Figure Drawing: Design and Invention be a good anatomy book for someone who took a whole slew of animation classes(including figure drawing)?
Lets just say its the definitive book for figure drawing for all mediums.
for the michael hampton boom, where do i find it?? i can only find them for like £100😭😭
The Morpho book spines are intentional. Books like that are designed to more easily lay flat.
Question, do these books also serve for the purpose of leaening to draw on paper as it does digitally?
they're suitable for any drawing!
yo good content man keep up
Thanks!
THANK YOU
Is there a specific book you would pick first as a new artist going into anatomy
I have 4 of the morpho anatomy books but I don't know how to use the books input into actual practice, how do I do that? Some of the books barely have words.
i draw alot☺
I bought the first one, he wrote a lot
Thank you man, you earned a sub
Where can I buy?
if if was for me I would love to buy the entire catalog of Andrew Loomis books but I have no money i have the pdfs though 😅
Thank you Mr Uy
You’re welcome Mr. Baral.
can I substitute Andrew Loomis books for Gottfried Bammes's books via anatomy and constructive drawing?
You asking for permission? Lol. There are tons of books on anatomy and figure drawing. Use what works for you
0:08 broooo 😂😂😂
😂
More books!
On the way!!
I'm going to buy these books from a used bookstore so not only you don't get any of the money through an affiliate link but the artist sees no money either cuz that's the way the ghost rolls
Are you okay
Nah pirate the PDF files, pdf to jpg, then print the books yourself
I would just watch the video loomis method because I bought his book it's extremely hard to understand in the way it's written . there's no exercises or anything so if you're a beginner you're not going to know what he's talking about
Yas there is soo much texts
pricey books but thry look worth it
Only if they weren't all that expensive I could maybe get my patents to buy me one since I got no credite card yet
You can get the PDF.
@@donoibagere5057 where
Please don’t put red bars at the bottom. I really thought I had watched this video before.
Dude you look so similar to Brian from "lets build that app" youtube channel. Are you sure you are not related to him.
tiny books, the size of a paperback novel, hard to use, read.
I’m Batman
Strange how there are no black or asian heads in Loomis' books 🤔
As someone once pointed out to me, just because he's an old geaser from before modern culture doesn't make him the cream of the crop. Better to just use Morpho and or youtube tutorials than that old racist (by modern standards, he was probably a nice teacher. But it's better to learn from someone who actually teaches diversity in art with contemporary understanding.)
I don't think aisan, black or any race's anatomy has such a major difference that it needs it's own category, plus it's a beginner's book so it shouldn't really have detailed difference in races.
PS: im not saying that being white is the default form of a human. im just saying that a beginners book shouldn't cover minute details.
@@CVM5LVT I agree. Since it's for beginners you gotta make it simple for a beginner so they don't feel overwhelmed if they get overwhelmed they'll quit or fail
@@CVM5LVT That's literally what he wants to point out. The author of the book not showing different "racial groups" and people like you not noticing HOW IMPORTANT that is are part of the problem. Body masses are distributed a bit different amongst different human groups, most Chinese women don't have the same body types as Indian women, afrocolombian wom3n or Congolese wom3n. In fact if we dig dipper Congolese, cameroonese and Ethiopian wom3n doesn't have the same body type and face structure... You just need to analyze how even 20 years ago people would go through hell and back just to get the huge variety of monolid eyes, different types of black African facial structures, afro hair, skin tones... etc right while drawing. All this just made it more clear that white sprmcy didn't fade away, it destroyed info about any other human group that wasn't "ar1an white". Books like this only add to that mess...
I think you should educate yourself a bit about this.
Human beings shouldn't need to learn from one standardized version of their own species and then make an EXTRA EFFORT to draw "everyone else". Is that simple.
@@SantaceBagheera actually if you read the book. The author does tell you play around with proportions and bone structure to get different looks. There is no said...extra effort.
@@gtrrohit5078 that doesnt change any of the words I said.
Thats doesn't change the fact that, non white people have been forced to "play around" to get things that white people got with way less effort.
Such as being the standard for everything including drawing tips.