quarta-feira, 13 de outubro de 2010

Gray wolf in colored pencil - copy from Carl Brenders


Time is still too short to go on with the triangulation tutorial. Maybe next week my students will be so busy they will give me some time off, but for now there is no way I can do it. So, to keep this place alive, here is something nice I did in colored pencil. Well, at least I think it's nice.

Making copies is a great way to learn. This is a very small copy (about 10x10 cm) done in colored pencil of a Carl Brenders (gouache?) original. It was pretty fast, maybe around three or four very relaxed hours over two sessions. Most of the trouble it gave me was self-inflicted. I wanted to do the whole thing just with four pencils (caran-d'ache orange, yellow, light blue (though I forgot and used a bit of darker blue on the nose, I think, quite without need), and red, and black for darkening and gray for desaturating. I wanted to prove to a couple of friends that you don't need the convenience colors, as the name implies, you can mix them as long as you have saturated colors, it's the opposite you cannot do - those glowing "neon" colors just can't be made from your payne's gray, burnt umber, sienna, or sap greens, I'm afraid, but the opposite is quite doable, though it will tax your patience (and therefore teach you a lot about your colors).

Oh, and the hairs were done with a blade.

sexta-feira, 1 de outubro de 2010

Triangulating Yorick


A skull from an archeological dig, that we had around in our scientific illustration class. Yes, of course we called him Yorick. I wonder what blunt instrument made that indentation on his forehead (not to mention that ruined eye-socket and those zygomatic arches; but those are fragile and the poor guy was centuries old). I started by triangulating it, but then I got distracted by something (there was always something going on on those classes!) and I believe I just eyeballed the back of the head. It was just a joyous little drawing, the real job at that time was hard, time-consuming, mind-numbing stippling. 

Work in progress

At a very garish stage....just something to keep you guys (all two of you) happy while I'm too busy with classes to preach about the joys of triangulation for life drawing.