Coby's sketch book
#61

Reply
#62






Followed James Zapata's Gumroad tut and other studies.
Reply
#63










Reply
#64
quick sketch and study dump



















Reply
#65











Reply
#66





More study's/ Still life and some hands from a photo.
Reply
#67






Attached Files Image(s)


Reply
#68
Study
Reply
#69
Nice volume of studies and work! Keep it uppp :)

Reply
#70
@pnate thank you.





Reply
#71
Some watercolors studies and some sketches.














Reply
#72
Hey thanks for posting on my thread, you got some serious work in here, I love your studies, great thread, keep it up!!
Reply
#73
Hey Chrisferz, Thanks.

More sketches I did earlier in the week a couple wips and some studies.











Reply
#74









Reply
#75


Reply
#76




Whats up daggers? Just an update.
Reply
#77
o___________o 
Lots of fascinating stuff in here, Coby! Must be all the experimentation that you do!

Those watercolour fishies are divine, btw <3 

I guess I would say to try and vary your edges to get a more solid form happening, as well as taking material properties into account and how light would react with them, like for example:


Did a quick paint over demo'ing some stuff. 

So I used a hard-edge brush and tried to give the figure a bit more "weight" and "solidness".

If you're painting an image that has fire in it, it's really hard for the image to *pop* if the canvas isn't a bit dark from the get-go. So, by adding a multiply layer and filling it with a darker colour, then linking a layer mask to the layer by clicking on the [  O  ] button on the layer toolbar and painting in black where I wanted to subtract darkness, I was quickly able to give the painting a bit more dimension.

In addition to this, I adjusted the levels to get rid of any 0% blacks that you had in your image prior. Also painted over some areas that were unnecessarily dark, like her hair. Try to make it a habit not to use anywhere below 10% black in your images (and the same goes with whites, no large areas with above 90% white. Peak highlights are fine, depending on how you use them), because you illustration will end up looking flat/lifeless.

Also, really try to think about an object and its property in regards to light. It helps a lot :D
Oh and also concentrate on where you light source is in the image and stick to it!

I hope this has helped in some way, just my two cents,

Keep up the hard work! o/!

sketchbook | pg 52
"Not a single thing in this world isn't in the process of becoming something else."
I'll be back - it's an odyssey, after all
Reply
#78
@smrr Thank you for the paintover and the input. I Struggled with this image allot. I have been having a hard time with lighting as you can see. The paintover helps greatly as I can see exactly what your talking about.
Reply
#79
Nice ladies, enviro thumbnails have good colors.

Reply
#80
@crackedskull Thank you. I need to do more thumbs more often.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)