The drawing of Gary Cooper was the easiest. Drawing men--especially as they get older--is much more forgiving for me, because I feel like if the lines aren't perfect, it's okay. Lines on a face denote age, so you can get away with a little more.
Lynda Carter took about 3-4 times longer to draw; I even had to use a lightbox to help with her lips a little. And I'm still not 100% happy with how it turned out, because I don't think it really looks like her. Drawing women for me is always difficult, because it's just the opposite of...um...men. Efficiency of line is of the utmost importance. One stray line, and it changes the image or makes them look old.
I learned recently that humans recognize faces by abstraction, as opposed to creating an exact image in our imagination. I think I got this with the Gary Cooper image. It doesn't look exactly like him, but I caught his long nose, square chin, and wide mouth. Loomis' diagram helps to place everything properly on the face. There are diagrams for the human face that chart every contour of it, and some of it is pretty wild how basically similar we all are.
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