Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Fall of the House of Usher

These are some concept sketches for a new personal project I'm working on. It's based on "The Fall of the House of Usher" by Edgar Allen Poe. I wanted the house to literally feel as though it could swallow you whole. The theme of twins appears in several places in the story, so in most of the designs I wanted to make the house symmetrical. I want to subconsciously infer the "twin" idea.

Friday, November 02, 2012

I WAS A GRANDPA WEREWOLF! TUTORIAL!

 This is where we are heading...




 After some very quick ideation sketching I did this rough. My main considerations here were character and communicating the concept. I already had an idea for lighting but instead of indicating it in this sketch I focused on just concept and communication.



 After feeling confident about the design I moved into detail and refining and designing. Here I made little visual notes to remind me of what I want to do later on in the rendering. I want to "keep something in the tank" and leave some exciting bits to be explored, I don't want to figure it all out yet. I find this keeps me interested and leaves room for happy accidents and surprises. I make sure to save a flattened copy of this on a multiply layer to refer to once I start painting.



 My next step was to drop in a color ground and begin blocking in large forms. I begin painting under my drawing to maintain the integrity of the design, I also let the ground show through in places for variety. I paint on top of the drawing when I want to make the form more 3-D. I find this helps maintain the original character of the drawing.
The swatches are there to help me maintain the color relationships I want.



 I am only concerned with the lighting coming from above at this point. It is easier to concentrate on one light source at a time.



 You may have noticed that I flipped the canvas. I do this to get "fresh eyes" on the painting. At this stage I lay down a rough blocking of the lighting.



 This a close up of the refined cyan light source.



 I have been reading about Howard Pyle and how he used to edit his paintings down to what was only necessary. At this point I asked myself "what is the cane doing for me? Does it help tell the story? Is it distracting?" I decided it wasn't doing a whole lot so I added a smashed jack o' lantern. I dropped in a white layer on %60 opacity and drew on another layer on top. I want to see enough of the composition to make the pumpkin work but not so much as it distracts from my drawing the new element.



This is an example of me checking the drawing against the painting using the same method I described above.



The finish! I hope this was helpful, if anyone would like to know about anything I haven't covered here just ask.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

10 minute digital paintings


   These are some 10 minute paintings I did using a great website that is basically a drawing workshop online. You have a variety of subjects to choose from: men and women, costumed or nude, and animals. you can also choose the length of time each slide is held from 30 second to up to 10 minutes. They also have what they call a class which range from 30 minutes to 6 hours where you are given short poses which build to longer ones. check them out!

http://www.pixelovely.com/gesture/

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Monday, May 21, 2012

Knight


4 1/4" x 3 1/2" ,Watercolor and white gouache 25 minutes



Monday, May 07, 2012

Cowboy portrait


4"x6" Watercolor and white gouache

Thursday, April 26, 2012

10 Minute Quick Sketch

  
Water color and white gouache

Monday, January 30, 2012