
Author: kluskiwszechmocy
Spent the last two days working on this little archery guide in art and writing. Considering the rise in popularity of archers in pop culture this hopefully comes in handy for a bunch of fandoms.
Source: AuroraCarina-Chan
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Actually! The big muscle group that birds use to move their wings is the Pec Minor, which lies just beneath the Pec Major (your outer pecs). In humans, this muscle is tiny compared to the Pec Major because we don’t use it for much (besides stabilizing the scapula)—if we had wings, though, that Pec Minor would be superbly developed, and probably be about the same size as the Pec Major in order to function properly and support those wings, which would attach somewhere around the scapula. And with that, you’d develop all the muscles that stabilize and move the scapula, including your serratus anterior (the nice scale-like muscles on ripped dudes) and the trapezoid muscle along your upper back and neck. The Pec Major would either increase in size, too, or remain about the same because it supports both arm and wing movement. Basically, we’ve already got the equipment needed to support wings, and you don’t need to go slapping on new muscle groups.
10 typical perspective errors
it’s quite a long tutorial, you’ll find the rest under the Read More or you can download the pdf file here























