Photographic reference gives you one viewpoint. A 3D model gives you every viewpoint. drawingStud.io loads rotatable models — figure, skeleton, écorché, objects — directly in the browser, so you can spin to the angle that's teaching you something, then set a timer and draw.
Browse 3D ModelsAnatomy drills — you want to see the exact back-three-quarter angle of the deltoid. Foreshortening practice — you need a figure reaching at camera, held still. Écorché study — a skeleton with the overlay of a muscular figure you can alternate between. Any case where "I wish I could just rotate this" is the thought you have looking at a photo.
Enable 3D Models in the media filter, start a session, and use mouse-drag (or touch) to rotate. The timer keeps running while you set the angle, so either pause, or set the angle fast and commit. For classical-style practice, I'd set the timer to 5–10 minutes and one angle per session.
Start a drawing session with any of these. Six are shown — browse all 364 in the directory.
Tutorials, iconography primers, and notes on sacred art practice.
Open the studio, pick a category, set a timer, and go. It's free to start.
Open the Studio