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5.0 out of 5 stars Very useful
There are lots of visual reference books out there. It would be easy to populate a bookshelf with them. After a while, though, they start to look the same.

Not this one. Heavily foreshortened poses are the hardest (for me at least), so this book devotes itself to genuinely distinctive views. It may sound like distorion to describe an arm or leg as being a third length...

Published on Jun 11 2004 by wiredweird

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars interesting poses, bad position and poor quality photographs
The poses in this book are indeed very dynamic and interesting but the one MAJOR draw-back is that they are all with the models laying down on the ground. Definitely not a very practical figure reference book for an illustrator like myself. I mean lets be honest, how many times are you going to be drawing a figure contorted on the ground verses standing and engaged in...
Published on Sep 28 2000


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars interesting poses, bad position and poor quality photographs, Sep 28 2000
By A Customer
The poses in this book are indeed very dynamic and interesting but the one MAJOR draw-back is that they are all with the models laying down on the ground. Definitely not a very practical figure reference book for an illustrator like myself. I mean lets be honest, how many times are you going to be drawing a figure contorted on the ground verses standing and engaged in some sort of action. It may, however, be possible too adapt some of the poses for a standing position and yet gravity affects the body completely differently when it is horizontal instead of vertical. The photographs themselves are very poor in terms of quality in that they are: muddy, bad resolution, slighty out of focus, badly lit etc. etc. etc. Basically this was a very disappointing purchase. The "Fairburn System" series is far better than this book for photographic figure reference material; however, very hard to find.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Good laying down shots - no variety!, Jan 20 2009
By 
Molly Nemecek "Enerjak" (Vancouver, BC, Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Atlas of Foreshortening: The Human Figure in Deep Perspective (Paperback)
Although this book would be great if you wanted to draw a bunch of shots of people lying down - there's no action! No standing up, no shots in motion, nothing to do with holding objects or running or walking or anything. It's just all laying down. Quite boring, I wish it was better for the price that it was. :/ I'm considering selling it. Wish there was something better.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Very useful, Jun 11 2004
By 
wiredweird "wiredweird" (Earth, or somewhere nearby) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Atlas of Foreshortening: The Human Figure in Deep Perspective (Paperback)
There are lots of visual reference books out there. It would be easy to populate a bookshelf with them. After a while, though, they start to look the same.

Not this one. Heavily foreshortened poses are the hardest (for me at least), so this book devotes itself to genuinely distinctive views. It may sound like distorion to describe an arm or leg as being a third length of the other. In fact, it is distorion if they are the same length, when viewed from some angles.

This book gives an uncommon perspective - it has earned its place on my shelves.

[review of first edition]

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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Reference Book, Sep 30 2002
By 
Eric R. Rose' (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Atlas of Foreshortening: The Human Figure in Deep Perspective (Paperback)
I have been using Mark Edward Smith's two excellent photographic references as a source for practicing figure drawing over the last year or so. I was a bit hesitant to buy this book - afraid that it might just be duplicating what I already have - but once it arrived in the mail I was really glad that I did. The quality of the photography is *fantastic* and it's printed on a glossy stock which preserves the halftones and detail which unfortunately sometimes get 'washed out' in Smith's books.

The range of poses is great too - from some very classical poses to some really "out-there" angles and poses which border on contortionism. Some of the most beautiful poses in this book are ones which a live model couldn't hold for more than 2-5 minutes, so having it captured on paper is a real bonus. All in all, I wuold say that the combination of poses and camera angles provides a fantastic reference work for studying the muscles of the body in various states of tension and compression.
I think I'm going to be spending lot of time drawing from this book.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Book, Mar 26 2000
By A Customer
If you are an artist looking for dynamic poses this is the book for you. It is a great guide to help you get some very interesting perspectives of humans. I highly recommend it.
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Atlas of Foreshortening: The Human Figure in Deep Perspective
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