Thursday, July 16, 2009

D&D Sketches



Here's some sketches I've done within the last two weeks or so. Both sets were done during gaming sessions of Dungeons and Dragons whilst playing, waiting for dinner, and in the van in mid-transit. Sketching random stuff when around other people seems to be a bit easier for me to do than when alone. It's a lot more fun, at any rate, especially when the guy next to you keeps shouting, "BACON OF HOPE!"

It may be a bit hard to see at this size, but the eyepatch-wearing tree is saying, "Yarr!"

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Balls!

It's been a while since I posted something, but I'm too tired to scan in my recent sketchbook pages. Instead, here's some lighting practice (sans reflected lighting. Shhh...) that I did a few minutes ago with my current brush loadout. Most were rendered with custom brushes I made with either Photoshop's standard round brush or ink marks, washes, and splatters that I scanned in from a mangled piece of bristol board. The balls labeled "Ditlev's" and "Yumedust's" were made with custom brushes courtesy of Ditlev and Yumedust, respectively. The one labeled "signature," if not immediately clear, was made with a stamp brush I use for...well, my signature. On stuff. ...Yep.



Tomorrow I'll have an honest update with those sketchbook pages I hinted at earlier.

Monday, June 29, 2009

ArtOrder Challenge: Vampires

I was so downhearted yesterday when I tried to submit my entry to ArtOrder's B&W Vampire challenge, only to find that my e-mails were being bumped. Thankfully, the fellow that sponsored the challenge was cool enough to extend the deadline by asking for resubmissions! True, I did resubmit pretty late today - around close to 6 p.m. or so - but if he checked his mail at 7 yesterday, I should be fine, right? ...Right?

Anyway, here's my stab at Gwenth and Garreth, the two necuratul described in the challenge brief. 3"x6.75", India ink and white gouache on bristol.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Character Challenge of the Week: Envoy of the Khemethar

I entered Conceptart.org's Character of the Week (CHOW) challenge for the first time, and have learned a good deal about my process and tastes as a result. Poor pyramids, though. I'm still covered in shame from butchering them. Anyway, the brief this time around had us illustrating an envoy of the Khemethar, a spacefaring race that inspired the Egyptian pantheon. I chose to depict Osiris, green skin and all.



CHOW regulations also require the posting of work in progress images. Here are mine:


In other news, I'm going to be entering ArtOrder's black and white challenge. I gets ta' use ink fer this one, and art directors from three different companies will be jurying it!

Monday, June 15, 2009

I graduated! ...Yay?

With all my course work and units taken care of, I walked the Walk at yesterday's graduation/commencement ceremony at CSU East Bay. The Traditional Arts B.F.A., eet eez mine! Of course, this is no time to rest on my laurels. Gotta get my webcomic restarted, gotta send off a storyboard portfolio to Pixar...so much stuff that must be done!

Perhaps they'd get done sooner if I actually sat down to work on them? Hrmm...

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Last Batch of Independent Study Images

The academic quarter is over, and I've submitted the last of my I.S. works, including a 5-page comic as my final series. First, the weeklies:






The comic that follows was done entirely in Photoshop. The last few pages were really rushed, and I think it shows, sadly. Still, as with the weekly pieces, the process of making each page was good practice. Note to self: stop abusing the multiply mode!



Fonts from Dafont.com and Blambot.com, by the way.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

More Dinking Around with Digital Painting, Plus Scribbler

More stuff from my independent study. As before, my time limit on each of these was three hours. Wheeeee~


This one (below) is unfinished, but I like where it's going. I'll probably finish it up and use it in something else next week.


Also, I found this nifty little Flash procedural drawing whatsit. It's called Scribbler, and it basically takes vector paths that you draw in a mini-window and extrapolates lines upon them. Quite fun. Example: