Drew this for a friend who has a Charger Hellcat. Not what I usually draw, had to get a few ideas from the web.
Drew this for a friend who has a Charger Hellcat. Not what I usually draw, had to get a few ideas from the web.
Are the back wheels larger as a cartoon or caricature approach (both words start with car)?
Gary W. Priester
gwpriester.com | eyetricks-3d-stereograms.com | eyeTricks on Facebook | eyeTricks on YouTube | eyeTricks on Instagram
And I suppose were I not so distracted I would have noticed Cartoon in your Subject.
Gary W. Priester
gwpriester.com | eyetricks-3d-stereograms.com | eyeTricks on Facebook | eyeTricks on YouTube | eyeTricks on Instagram
I like that Gray. It looks like the cartoon car a cartoon hero would use.
Stygg
Thanks stygg. They're quite the car packing 707 H.P.
I like your colour selection and you draw one of my favourite cars but the thing I dislike in this is you have drawn back wheels larger than front wheels except this everything you draw is fabulous.
Gray might have done that for effect, but it does make the front wheel look like it's floating (because the car isn't angled to have the wheels share the same horizontal at their base)..
Amazing drawing though. I feel like a complete fraud making comments about Gray's superb work.
Thanks Darlene, Paul.
In the world of hot rods, cars always had larger rear tires than front for reasons I won't go into here. Car toons are always distorted and don't follow rules of perspective or size. It's all done for effect. Google Big Daddy Ed Roths car toons. Roth was the original car builder and master artist that used this style. He was way ahead of his time in both car building and car toons.
This one, which was the first vector drawing I did is drawn in perspective. The background car, a 1954 Jag C type is also vector.
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