Nicky D's Sketchworld
#21
So I'm looking at other artists like Alex Negrea and Marc Brunett and realizing that I really need to be more methodical with my process. 
I started with really specific, RELEVANT studies to the design, followed by a breakdown of lineart, local values, lights, ambient occlusion, then finally color. I based my design off of Chinese and Greek armor although you can't really see the Chinese influence in the final design.
Time taken was about a whole day, maybe eight hours or so, and I painted everything from imagination, putting the reference away after the initial sketches and form studies.









Reply
#22
Started off the morning with some figure studies.


I'm continuing painting these character concepts in color, just trying to get closer to that finished look.
Also, I'm trying to step outside my zone of purely fantasy design and armor dudes with swords.

From my thumbnails I picked the forest ranger-flamethrower guy and a robot samurai , then grabbed some reference and did some value studies. Going to do the full paintings tomorrow!









Reply
#23
Painting a few more characters in color, just messing around and trying to have fun. Color is really hard! I'm trying both a direct color approach and a grayscale to color style.









Reply
#24
This is everything I've been working on the past week. Again spending more time with values, working my way through Basic Rendering 3 from the Ctrl+Paint store. Currently learning how to have a full value range in a painting, diffuse vs. direct light, and atmospheric perspective.
The character sketches are for week 5 of my class with Anthony Jones. The assignment is take a character design and level it up twice, and to paint single character portraits based on an idea or story.











Reply
#25
The latest project was to finish a painting to the highest level of polish. This time around I made composition my focus as I'm really trying to understand what makes a successful character illustration, not just a good costume design. The space the character occupies and the mood of the entire image are the key elements here.

So, I grabbed a bunch of images from some Magic artists and set out to do something similar. It was a long process with a lot of iteration and fixing mistakes but I'm pretty happy with what I have so far.











Reply
#26
It's almost done, just needs a bit of polishing, some rendering on the armor and birds in the background, maybe some details on the rocks in the foreground



Reply
#27
Studying Sargent



Reply
#28
Some studies for metal reflectivity, gotta learn how to paint that shiny armor!




Reply
#29
Great studies :), just keep pushing man, it definitely makes me want to work harder.
Reply
#30
I love how focused your studies are. They also conjoin with your interests nicely.

A lot of sketchbooks on this forum are shotgunned with too many different things; a perspective study, an anatomy study, animal study, medieval design study, architecture study, exclusively studying from photos, exclusively drawing from imagination ALL. WITHIN. A. FREAKING. WEEK.

It's cool to have many interests, but FOCUS is important as hell, especially when it comes to improving as an artist.

Good work; many people can learn a lot from these 2 pages.

Reply
#31
(04-18-2016, 09:28 PM)Jaktrayter Wrote: I love how focused your studies are. They also conjoin with your interests nicely.

A lot of sketchbooks on this forum are shotgunned with too many different things; a perspective study, an anatomy study, animal study, medieval design study, architecture study, exclusively studying from photos, exclusively drawing from imagination ALL. WITHIN. A. FREAKING. WEEK.

It's cool to have many interests, but FOCUS is important as hell, especially when it comes to improving as an artist.

Good work; many people can learn a lot from these 2 pages.

Thank you man, I absolutely agree with what you're saying about focus. It's easy to get caught up in the panic of wanting to get better at everything at once; perspective, anatomy, form, light, color, narrative, materials, character design, environment design, and so on forever. At some point you have to just sit down and figure out what you want to do professionally and do JUST that thing and exclusively the studies that will get you better at specific pieces and specific projects, otherwise it's just studying for the sake of studying.

Focus is definitely the key.

Reply
#32
(04-18-2016, 08:50 PM)yangdaniel027 Wrote: Great studies :), just keep pushing man, it definitely makes me want to work harder.

Thank you yangdaniel027, pushing harder its what we're all about on this forum!

Reply
#33
Progress from the current piece. I beefed up the armor design and expanded the composition to make the central figure look a bit more "heroic" .
The background needs a lot of work, gotta study some clouds. Also, I think his legs might be too long now? Hmmmm



Reply
#34
Nice sketchbook man.
Yeah I think the legs are looking a bit too long on the figure, also maybe try moving the figure and the pile he's standing on to the left or right, moving it off centre even slightly can make for a more interesting composition sometimes.

Reply
#35
(04-20-2016, 03:31 AM)Triggerpigking Wrote: Nice sketchbook man.
Yeah I think the legs are looking a bit too long on the figure, also maybe try moving the figure and  the pile he's standing on to the left or right, moving it off centre even slightly can make for a more interesting composition sometimes.

You're absolutely right man. I took your suggestions and made the legs shorter and moved the figure and pile of rocks over to the left. I also changed the background and the lighting setup to push the mood further. Thanks so much dude!




Reply
#36
Trying out digital painting from life for the first time, thought I'd do a still life with some shiny things around my house.



Reply
#37
A sketchy guy



Reply
#38
Just doing some figure studies from Loomis today



Reply
#39
Damn you do some nice imagination poses. ALSO DRAW THE LEGS AND FEET, I have the same issue where I neglect them and then when I do draw them they are subpar quality.

Reply
#40
(04-23-2016, 02:47 PM)crackedskull Wrote: Damn you do some nice imagination poses. ALSO DRAW THE LEGS AND FEET, I have the same issue where I neglect them and then when I do draw them they are subpar quality.

Ha ha thanks dude, you're right I need to stop ignoring the damn legs and feet! Also hands. A common weakness among us figurative artists

Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 11 Guest(s)