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I've been looking for some kind of technical illustration school here in my country but I think it is nonexistent here.
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Any advice will be very much appreciated.
Many Thanks!
I agree.jamesprovost wrote:TechnicalIllustrators.org is a good place to start
Techniques and software are possible to learn online via the myriad tutorial sites. But I think learning less-programmatic (ie. NOT step 1, step 2) things like drawing and colouring are more difficult to learn on your own. These are much more subtle things that you have to develop an eye for by having constant critique. Otherwise, you'll be trying to emulate something you don't fully understand and it'll show.
Keep us posted about your efforts! Maybe we'll add a list of schools to our Resources Page.
No, you don't need a wacom right away. Most of us made due without them for years, they sure are nice though.fiel wrote:Mike,
I checked both books on Amazon. I read that 'Design Drawing by Francis Ching' primarily focuses on architectural illustration. I am looking for one that deals on automotive/mechanical illustration. Do you know any?I am still looking for one. For now, I believe that 'The Complete Technical Illustrator' by Jon Duff and Greg Maxson is the book I need. I read that it is an "old-school" type of technical illustration book. I had some drafting in high school so I think this book would match well with my utter-beginner skills. I don't know a thing about Illustrator, though!
I am gonna have it installed after my brother reformats the pc.
I checked Mr. Hulsey's basic tutorials some time ago. I will start practicing as soon as I have Illustrator.
Do I need to have a wacom tablet or something? Will my training be negatively affected if I don't use one?
Many thanks!