Since we have the Full Sail Game Art and Computer Animation Art Show coming up in less than a week, I felt compelled to take a quick break from my large animal painting (that I knew I wouldn’t finish in time) in order to complete one or two pieces for the show. I’ve been sitting on my Raven Bear for a very long time and decided it was time to pull the trigger on it and wrap it up. The whole of the painting was a little dark in the background so I decided to pop a little light on the brick wall in the back so the values weren’t so uniformly dark.
Category Archives: Blog
Treasure Map to Ghost Gold
In planning my daughter’s 7th birthday party, a ghost hunter themed celebration, I was called upon to create a treasure map to ghost gold that was apparently buried in our back yard. I constructed the map from memory, sketching it first and then inking it with my micron pens on bristol board. Once I was done, I scanned it, laid out coordinates in Photoshop and embellished it with a few ornaments. After printing out 16 copies, one for each kid, I soaked and then spattered them with coffee and tossed them in the oven for 10 minutes at fairly high heat to weather them. I think the effect worked pretty well. I really enjoyed the process and think I might enjoy making more treasure maps in the future. Props to any of you who figure out the clue at the bottom. It was a little challenging for the seven-year-olds but once I helped them a bit, they were off and running!
Larger Animal Painting Value Pass Continues 2
I’ve been super busy with work and planning my daughter’s birthday (she wants a ghost hunter themed party! Couldn’t be prouder!) I have been managing to get work done on the painting nonetheless. Got the character’s pretty well blocked in and I’ve started plugging away on the ship and background. I’m not super happy with the clouds and water I have in my comp so I’ve started pulling new reference of a more active sky and water. Here is the latest image of the work. I am hopeful I will have the values blocked in after about two more week’s work. Keeping my fingers crossed that nothing comes up and gets in the way.
Larger Animal Painting Value Pass Continues
I’m making slow and steady progress. Couldn’t resist starting to push in a little detail and now that I am looking at it small, on my computer screen, I see there will be a fair amount of shadow work that needs to be pushed further due to the captain’s large head. No biggie. I’m up to the task. I think I’m going to get my other characters a little more fleshed in. I’m still not really feeling the cat and may have to amend the face to look more like the smaller cat painting I did earlier. I mean, I can have two different cat crew members. The other one is the cook, after all. We’ll have to see.
Beginning of Larger Charcoal Multi-Animal Painting
I’ve been so wrapped up in the progress of this latest painting that I have neglected to post in a bit. I started a larger painting, 30″ x 40″ showcasing a few animals together in one scene. This image depicts our captain and a few of his mates collecting a prize ship. The mock-up took a while and there are still areas in the comp that I’m going to have to work through on the fly, matching lighting, refining detail, and the like. Regardless, I finished blocking in most of the image and am now pushing in a little more value range and refinement in the details. There is a long way to go and I grit my teeth whenever I look at it now but then, as my colleague Johannah said to me, “It looks bad until it doesn’t.” I’m going to try to remember that wisdom and plow ahead. I will try to be a little more regular with my progress here.
Martian Sketches
I’m getting ready to start another children’s book based on some H.G. Wells, “Miranda and the Martians.” The title isn’t set in stone and I haven’t written the story yet but I do know it will involve Miranda and some martians. To that end, I took a little break from my animals as I gesso some more canvases and started sketching some martian designs. I sketched out six designs and might try out some more though I am very partial to the bottom left. I like the tripod tentacles and the face feels like it has a lot of promise. Who knows, the book is pretty far off so I have time. There is the animal book due before this one, after all.
Jackrabbit Charcoal Stage Complete
Another charcoal done and added to the list awaiting painting. On this jackrabbit I not only punched up the lights with a white colored pencil but I also tried pushing in with a black colored pencil to heighten the contrast in a few spots and add in a little post charcoal and fixing detail. The colored pencils are working great but I have found that you have to have a decently waxy colored pencil to apply this technique. I tried using a colerase pencil but it didn’t build up on the surface all that well. I imagine the same would be true with watercolor pencils though I have not tried them yet. The traditional colored pencils work well though. I might find myself employing a full range of grays in the future but for now the white and black are working well.
Squirrel Charcoal Stage Complete
SQUIRREL! So here is my latest charcoal value pass animal painting. Still making good progress moving forward on these. This one was quite challenging as it measures 5″ x 7″ and getting the right amount of detail in there was a little difficult. There are still a few places that I think I will have to push further when it comes to the painting stage but as far as the charcoals values go I think this is a solid place to be. According to my records, the tally of my animal painting is 11 fully painted, 4 completed charcoals, leaving 11 more charcoals to complete to get enough for my alphabet book. If I can get them done quick enough, I may be able to meet my deadline to have a show in August. I didn’t think it was possible but I have a little vacation time saved up and I’m maintaining a pretty good clip. Lets hope I can keep it up!
Owl Charcoal Stage Complete
I was lucky enough to have some time this weekend to complete the charcoals of my owl. This one took a little longer than anticipated since I worked a little larger than usual at 11″ x 14″. I didn’t notice until I was well into it but the frame on this animal is a little skewed so getting it framed is probably going to be a little problematic. Lucky I work with gallery wrap canvas so I can still display it when I do my show with little issue. For those of you not in the know, gallery wrap is a deeper canvas that tends to look a little better when displayed without a frame than the shallow canvases.
The white colored pencil proved to be very useful for this one. Before I got to that stage of fixing the canvas, I found myself turning to the large rubber block eraser that I have had little use for since school. Getting that long, thin, sharp edge was very effective on those long light feathers around the eyes and in the brows. I’m definitely going to remember that use! When it comes to the painting, I’m thinking I might do a very faint pattern on the shirt. It feels like it needs a little something more down there.
Owl Charcoals In Progress
Here is the latest progress in the owl animal painting. The different feather textures are starting to come together. I still have to formulate a new design for the dress as the current design is very busy and I don’t think I want that to detract from the complexity of the feathers. Too much detail everywhere and I won’t be able to direct the viewers eye effectively. Again, working in the charcoal with my finger which a lot of artists tell you not to do but I feel like if it works, who is to say to not do it. We all have to find what works for us personally and that works for me.