Art school drapery studies. The man
with sunglasses and the cowboy are from photographs...

When drawing a figure with clothing, be conscious of form, action and tailoring. Think
of supporting surfaces, gravity, pull points and structure based on the six line abstraction.
Drapery is used to design a figure and is mostly fairly straight lines and the shapes of folds
is generally triangular.
Keep drapery on the form underneath...
At first glance, folds may seem chaotic so explain them to yourself and determine which
ones are significant and why. Reveal the figure underneath by using excess material and
an awareness of the points from which the material hangs. Design the drapery using your
knowledge of the location of knees, elbows, shoulders, etc. and when appropriate, the shapes of
the various body parts. The calf muscle on the right leg in the diagram above, for instance, or
the deltoid muscle on his left shoulder.
The knees and elbows are clearly pull points causing folds to lead to them.
Merely copying the surface appearance of folds leads to cutting into the underlying form or having
the form bulge out.
Eliminate folds that cannot be used for an explanatory purpose.
The action of the figure will provide opportunities to reveal pull points, twists, and to design
folds that show underlying forms.
The artist is concerned mostly with the excess material that allows for folds to occcur.
Clothing is designed with the average figure in mind.
the top button is at the pit of the neck, for instance, the third button down is at the
nipples of the breast, the fifth button at the navel and pleats are at the tip of the iliac...

Be sure that folds are off center and zigzagging down...

Folds follow the same pattern on the legs and arms...

1 - Wrap-around folds, 2 - High points cross the form to avoid monotony,
3 - Folds show foreshortening and the form underneath...

1 - Two soft edges indicates a shallow bump.
2 - One soft edge and one hard indicates a high bump....

There are three types of folds...surface, gravity and action. A surface
fold is lying on a form and taking the shape of the form. A gravity fold is also
called a hanging fold and the lines tend to be straight.
An action fold is a pulling fold and can be twisted or angular.
Lying on and hanging folds
Avoid parallel lines for hanging folds to avoid monotony...

1 - Look for places where drapery is on the form.