There are so many things I like about your McCoy drawing, Nicole, that beginning the list itself is harder than playing blind chess. I'll start by saying this: Your skill demonstrated here with McCoy is
several steps above and beyond where you were with Kirk. So much so that if you were to start your Kirk all over again, with what you've collected into your drawing consciousness now, you'd discover all those improvements yourself and I wouldn't need to make out a list at all. You'd say to yourself, "Oh yea, I get
this now, and I didn't even know about it last month."
That's not to downplay your Kirk (believe me, it was that one which inspired me to start responding). But you
know so much more now that doesn't need to be said.
I will point this out, though: You took a gamble by stylizing De Kelley a
little bit, by presenting a portrait that was not so photographic and more expressive and impressionistic. Which is
very, very good. For anyone who wants to see what I mean, take a look at the frame of McCoy from
this page on Memory Alpha. You absolutely captured De's spirit, and there's no way anyone in the world with at least one working eye wouldn't say, "Wow, you've really captured McCoy's character!" But it's not a spot-on, Xerox copy of the frame of the film; rather, it's an impression of the whole person you're portraying.
So you've made him look, um. . . somewhat younger. His hair is all dark, his skin isn't pockmarked, his neck is young and vigorous. He feels like he's in his early 40s; when I look at De on film, he looks like he's in his early 50s. (And 30 years later on the big screen, he'd only aged 10 years, so that's pretty nice.) If De were here to see your portrait, he'd probably say, "Well, don't
I look gorgeous?" And he does.
Looking "photographic" should not be the goal for any artist, even for a realist. But I would advise that when you do employ impressionism,
stay in control of it. Don't fall into the trap of drawing dark hair because you haven't practiced with salt-and-pepper hair. Don't get stuck with drawing a style simply because that's the style you've honed for yourself, and that's "your style," and you're stuck in a rut now. Draw an older man younger because
that's what you meant to do.
My vote for the portrait I want to see next: Nicole.
-DF "Mirror, Mirror, as in 'On the Wall'" Scott