this isn’t suppposed to be anatomically accurate, female and male pelvises have subtle differences, but these should do for drawing skeleton monsters :)
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"The Pelvis, with soft parts (bladder, rectum, uterus, and its appendages having been removed." A text-book of obstetrics. 1898.
Internet Archive
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i don't want responsibilities i just WANT TO DRAW BOANS ALL DAY EVERY DAY
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Pelvis mask is all finished, I might offer some in my shop
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Unusual domestic quail pelvis. Sideways butt.
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Art Tip: Remember the Pelvis Line & Hip Bones when drawing character poses
Credit: p2nki (twitter)
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▪︎ Musculature and bones of the lumbar spine, pelvis and thighs.
Artist/Maker: Benjamin Robert Haydon (1786-1846)
Date : 28 June 1805
Medium: Red and black ink with grey, brown and red washes on off-white paper.
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Pelvic bones
Common Sense Medical Adviser 1885
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🦴 more bones! 🦴 this time of the pelvis for a change.
having fun with some scratchy crusty grungy brushes.
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Throwback Thursday to the Human Architecture Series and the Pelvis
There's a very specific reason I chose the figure 8 for my logo. This motion of initiating the spiral away from center to return back to center is precious to our movements.
In the Adaptable Polarity series courses, we go over the first, and hopefully continual, movement of the sacrum in relationship to breath as it is one of the major cerebrospinal fluid pumps, or chi gates, or diaphragms (whatever language suits you best). This movement "should" be occuring even when we appear still.
What then happens when we actually introduce motion? Locomotion? Lemniscate?
We introduce side bending, one way. #coiling initiation?
That frontal plane paired with sagittal plane gives us transverse plane? And we're off to the races.
The most beautiful thing to me about seeing this motion through the pelvis, and feeling it too, is then the derivation through each spinal disc of the figure 8, , or Mobius coil? Now we're talking structure and energy
[Adaptable Polarity]
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