27 August 07

Birds in Flight I: American Crow

It’s hard to draw birds while they’re flying: there’s the problem, usually, of foreshortening, and you have to get the relative angle of the wings to the body right, and worst of all, the birds are on the move, so you don’t get very long to resolve the first two issues.

American crows: pen and ink on Sundance Felt A bird I see a lot is the American crow. We live on the edge of a field where they feed; we live on the flight path to and from their roost site in Davis; I see them often from my window at work. A challenge is always to get the correct amount of tapering in the wing as it joins the body, the slightly spread primaries. The “hunchback” look of a crow as it flies.

Albinistic crow: ballpoint pen Last night while we were at a baseball game a partial albinistic crow flew over. The tips of the wings were sliver, making it look a bit like a jackdaw gone wrong. I sketched it quickly in ballpoint on the scorecard I was using, but missed the opportunity to sketch a huge flyover of crows on their way to roost…

Posted by at 05:25 PM in Birds in Flight | Link |
  1. I can see I’m going to learn a lot from this sketchblog about bird ID by shape, rather than relying on colour or feather details. So crows are hunchbacks, huh?

    Great idea, hope you have the time to keep it up!


    richard    28. August 2007, 07:51    Link
  2. Richard — it’s not hard to sketch a bird a day, but I may not always have time to scan the sketch and post it — am hoping, though, to get 365 sketches in a year, not always a different species, but as much as that’s possible…


    Pica    28. August 2007, 10:03    Link
  3. I need frames of
    crow in flight


    ali majidian    27. February 2008, 23:28    Link

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