Monday, April 1, 2013
Coffee Filter Masterpieces
My local hangout, Foxy Loxy, is doing a small show of drawings done on coffee filters. The owner asked members of the Eschatology Society (my drawing crew) to do some pieces. Of course, I waited until the last minute, but I think that allowed me to be spontaneous when it came time to put pen to paper. These little guys were TOUGH to draw on. You can't erase, and any kind of liquid media, like ink, is just a disaster. I wound up using brown and white colored pencils, and doing the outlines on these with a Micron. I can pretty much draw a semi-truck right out of my head. So there ya go.
Wednesday, March 27, 2013
Animals and Jimi
I promise I will post more. At least twice a week, as long as you (?) keep coming by to look.
This page is a couple of things. The animal studies are just me trying to build up my visual vocabulary. Drawing animals helps me think differently about familiar shapes like eyes, hair, joints, etc. I also am trying to find the right amount of rendering for reptilian scales. It takes a lot of patience to effectively render textures like this, and also it takes experience and judgement to describe the scales enough, but not too much. I think I'll have to revisit scales quite a bit before I'll be satisfied with my mastery of them.
This is on Moleskine paper. Also, I think I predominately used my Kuretake no 40 brush on here. This is a TERRIBLE paper/brush combination, but I find I keep going back to it. The ink pools on top of the paper, and getting a nice, fine line is virtually impossible. If you see one line you like on this page, it's only because of the total refusal of my hands to yield to science and physics. It's a shame, because I love this sketchbook, and the pen is great on other papers.
You've got a keen eye, sailor. That is the unexampled Jimi Hendrix hanging out down there. I've been studying him a lot lately, in preparation for some large drawings. I don't think I'll ever tire of drawing inspiration from his music and his sense of style. He really did artists a favor.
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Monday, February 11, 2013
Jimi-san!
I'm still playing around with photoshop color, it's getting easier to manipulate the tools, but I imagine it may take quite some time to develop the taste in palette that will produce what I have in mind.
I did this in my sketchbook last Saturday at my drawing group meet-up; It's pretty simple line work; but I like some of the ideas. Probably 8x8 inches. I think you can see some Moebius, Mignola, and Fabio Moon, and maybe even some Miyazaki in this piece, and of course, I love all of those guys.
I did this in my sketchbook last Saturday at my drawing group meet-up; It's pretty simple line work; but I like some of the ideas. Probably 8x8 inches. I think you can see some Moebius, Mignola, and Fabio Moon, and maybe even some Miyazaki in this piece, and of course, I love all of those guys.
As of late I've really been into Jimi Hendrix, really borderline obsessed. He was just such an amazing individual. I feel like whenever he's mentioned, there's always some argument over whether or not he's "the greatest guitarist of all time". Of course, Jimi never claimed to be that. He was just an incredible artist, and his creativity and magic will live forever. I don't think he ever carried a sword.
I'll post more pretty soon. Thanks for looking.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Color, this and that.
Hello!
Let's get back to business. Every Saturday, I meet up with some friends at a coffee shop and we sketch, critique, and discuss the works of the masters. I did a drawing of Hellboy (surprise). It was done in blue pencil, in a Moleskine sketchbook, and inked with a Kuretake no. 40 pen, along with a Copic Multiliner .02 pen. I scanned it into photoshop, and with the help of a great tutorial, http://designinstruct.com/drawing-illustration/how-to-color-inked-line-art-in-photoshop/, I decided to give it a go. I think it turned out pretty good. I hope to continue to explore and learn color, and maybe acquire a good critique or two along the way. I was hoping to really get some form and texture in the line drawing, but my goal was to let the color do most of the lifting as far as rendering.
The original
Let's get back to business. Every Saturday, I meet up with some friends at a coffee shop and we sketch, critique, and discuss the works of the masters. I did a drawing of Hellboy (surprise). It was done in blue pencil, in a Moleskine sketchbook, and inked with a Kuretake no. 40 pen, along with a Copic Multiliner .02 pen. I scanned it into photoshop, and with the help of a great tutorial, http://designinstruct.com/drawing-illustration/how-to-color-inked-line-art-in-photoshop/, I decided to give it a go. I think it turned out pretty good. I hope to continue to explore and learn color, and maybe acquire a good critique or two along the way. I was hoping to really get some form and texture in the line drawing, but my goal was to let the color do most of the lifting as far as rendering.
The original
Also, you'll see I'm playing around with cartoon head shapes, as well as studying wrinkles. I'm ALWAYS making little studies of that stuff. I recently read Andrew Loomis say that wrinkles and textures should reinforce the form and support it's interpretation. He said that any lines and details that don't do this should be omitted. I was struck by that idea, and will continue to perfect it. I did the small studies on the bottom right with a Hunt no. 108, a very nice flexible copper pen. Great for when a brush won't provide enough control.
Here is a gesture sketch I did with a brush. This exercise is part of my goal of drawing with the brush, not inking with it. I'm trying to treat the brush like a flexible pencil. This is because I watched Moebius work on a video, and he held the tool very casually. I love the qualities the lines take with this approach, and it also makes me enjoy working a lot more, because it's a bit more carefree. Also, you'll see some little cast shadow studies on here. I've found that working things out on the side, just like long division, yields a better result. Sometimes I will redraw something 10 times on the comics page, repeatedly erasing and ruining the paper. I would get very angry during this process. Then it hit me: I was approaching the panel in question without a fully formed intention. I needed to work it out a little better somewhere else. It also REALLY helps me to scale things down to work out composition, lighting, and spatial relationships.
Lastly, here are some little cartoon sketches I did. I'm really getting into cartooning. I've just recently began to appreciate how sophisticated it is, and how deceptively difficult it can be. I want to do one Bill Watterson study a week, and also some studies of George Herriman.
Thanks for reading.
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