I have been meaning to take Gimp 2.10 out for a spin for a while now and finally got around to it by doing a few rabbit sketches.
Continue reading “Getting The Smudge Tool Working In Gimp 2.10”
The explorations of an artloader.
I have been meaning to take Gimp 2.10 out for a spin for a while now and finally got around to it by doing a few rabbit sketches.
Continue reading “Getting The Smudge Tool Working In Gimp 2.10”
A few weeks ago I set out to explore the use of stiffer brushes in acrylic painting after reading this post on the Crimson Daggers art forum.
I started by purchasing these bristle brushes from Cassart which I am very pleased with.
I found that the stiffer bushes allowed me to work with thicker paint and use less layers of paint than the glazing method I tried previously. Also I could use the technique of dry brushing which worked really well for blending soft edges.
Continue reading “An Exploration In Using Stiffer Brushes With Acrylics”
Here’s an experiment I did a while back trying to glaze using acrylics. I was trying to follow Matt Philleo’s teachings although I didn’t use anywhere near as many layers as he does. Continue reading “An Exploration In Glazing With Acrylics”
Have a wonderful Christmas everyone and may 2020 be a year full of blessing and happiness for you and your loved ones.
Over the past few weeks, I’ve gone back to figure drawing but this time I really wanted to come up with a solid process. A process that would allow me to invent figures from my imagination.
To do this I went back and re-studied a number of my favourite resources:
The process I’ve settled upon so far is as follows:
It’s not quite my perfect figure drawing process yet but it will do for now and I will tweak it as time goes by and I learn more stuff.
Any comments on this approach would be most welcome, I’m always open to critique – don’t be shy :).
About 2 years ago, my author friend John Fulton asked me collaborate with him on a self publishing project. He had written 8 short stories and needed some illustrations to go with them.
Now at the time John had just won an award for his writing and had had a book (The Wreck of the Argyll) published off the back of it so I was thrilled and honoured.
Having never tackled an art project of this magnitude before, I promised myself that I would treat this as a proper business venture, and be a real professional about it. Of course I promptly fell prey to a massive spell of procrastination. It took me around 8 months to complete the first illustration!
This is one of the reasons why, as I sit here typing this, I still can’t quite believe that our book is available for sale on Amazon at this very minute!
This project has been a fantastic learning experience for me, teaching me the importance of a defined workflow and of breaking work down into smaller and smaller chunks in order to beat procrastination.
I want to publicly thank John for his patience and hard work in writing the stories in the first place and in handling the Amazon side of things. John, it’s been an absolute pleasure mate!
If anyone buys this book – thank you and I hope you enjoy John’s stories as much as I did. There are some brilliant twists and turns.
This book cover piece is for a John Fulton short story called “The Bull In The Basement”.
For this one I experimented with a major change in my workflow, namely, I skipped the line drawing phase and went straight into painting shapes.
Continue reading “Project JKF-1: The Bull In The Basement Book Cover”
This book cover is for a short story called The Whisperer by John Fulton.
I tweaked my illustration workflow again here by putting more energy into doing more studies. Each study focussing on one particular component of the illustration.
I’ve been trying to power-up my painting skills with this digital painting of a blonde girl on a dark blue background. Done in Clip Studio Paint.
Continue reading “Digital Painting of a Blonde Girl on a Dark Blue Background”