Tuesday, December 27, 2022

Discovering Dragons--A Community Draw Along

First Friday of the month, starting January 6th:
DISCOVERING DRAGONS
a community draw along event
4-8pm east

Much like the #DrawTheExtinct project I did with my Twitch community for 18 months, we are switch gears to a new theme of #DiscoveringDragons

I'll provide some prompts and we'll each draw (or sculpt, or paint, or carve, or doodle) our own unique dragons combining those ideas. Work will be shared on my Discord, where we also vote to award little prizes.

Hope to see you there!

 

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Recent Toned Commissions

 I've finished all my recent toned paper commissions for the end of the year:


Dream



Michalangelo of the TMNT


Sir Quimp from The Middle Age


Ben Grimm: The Thing


Goldie the Gargoyle


Usagi Yojimbo


Wonder Woman


Leonardo of the TMNT


A Lantern Mouse


Usagi Yojimbo eating a rice ball


A Mouse in snake themed armor


A Mouse Botanist


A Bookish Mouse


Ragnier the Hunter


Calvin & Hobbes


Princess Mononoke



A Mouse Thief


Arzach


Boris the Bear


Grey Hulk: Mr. Fix-It


A Guardmouse


Deathwing: A Dragon


A Wise old Degu


A Princess Kitty


The Rocketeer


A Cat Adventurer



Tuesday, December 13, 2022

January Mouse Guard 2023(24!) Calendar Art


This year I'm releasing a Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar. I'll be taking copies with me to Baltimore and selling them through my Online Store (**SOLD OUT**). I created seven new pieces of artwork specifically for the calendar (even numbered months mainly). The new pieces were all drawn at 12" x 12" (the size of the Calendar itself)

To the left you can see the final art piece for that 13th month January 2024! I wanted to do something more geometric and stylized, some art the mice would have.

Below in this blogpost I'll walk through the steps to creating it.


Reference:
I started by searching for 'Medieval Calendar' imagery (things with moon phases or intertwining circles)––when this odd 1974 plate came up. It's a collectable piece of porcelain with a medieval art style to the design. And, well––I really liked it, so I decided to interpret it and resize it in my own way for my own needs. It took a lot of resizing this photo's elements before I could even start swapping out elements. By enlarging the center and eliminating the month calendars I had room to widen the outer ring for a better illustration space.


Layout:
I redesigned each shield to be an emblem of a mouse city (many of these were already established and hinted at in the extras pages of Winter & Black Axe) I used the month arches to hold the names of those settlements. The center became a mouse-sun and zodiac symbols became a twelve step moon phase.

The last part was to recreate that bayeux tapestry-like ring with mouse figures. I tried to stylize and simplify my version of that, which gave me freedom to use hares, birds, a frog, and a turtle as mounts without worrying about scale.


Inks:
With the above layout all set, I printed out the image (onto two sheets of legal paper that had to be registered and taped back together). I inked this piece on my Huion lightpad. Using the lightpad I could see through the 12" x 12" Strathmore bristol to the printout below so I could use it as a pencil guide. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens.

The detail was so tight, that I did need to use my smaller 0.3 nib Multiliner rather than the 0.7 I normally use (though I certainly used the 7 on the larger circular borders). I was a trick to get the outer characters to look good and to not want to add texture. Oh! and I messed up and forgot to switch out 'Shorestone' above the shield with the black circles to 'Dawnrock' I know the layout above has it right, but that's because I had to fix it so I could ink a patch of the correct letters onto the back of this piece in the corner to scan and swap out.

Flats:
When the inks were done I scanned them into Photoshop and started the coloring process. In this step I am filling in each area with a flat color (no rendering, no textures)–it's like a professional version of coloring-in-the-lines. It took me a while to decide on the color choices here. I didn't want the look of the 1974 reference plate. So I started with the known: the shield emblems. I then pulled from those as I filling in the other design elements around the piece, altering them sightly when needed.

At this stage I also established all the color holds (areas where I want the lineart to be a color other than black) Everything is a hold in this piece––the dark linework is a dark brown, then it was a matter of establishing from a design point-of-view what colors worked best for each other element

Final:
I rendered the piece using dodge and burn tools as well as a stock texture brush to add all the light, shadow, and texture. This piece is an oddity in that I was able to do very little rendering to just add a bit of scuff and focus texture so the piece didn't look so digital.

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

December Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar Art

This year I'm releasing a Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar. I'll be taking copies with me to Baltimore and selling them through my Online Store (**SOLD OUT**). I created seven new pieces of artwork specifically for the calendar (even numbered months mainly). The new pieces were all drawn at 12" x 12" (the size of the Calendar itself)

To the left you can see the final art piece for December. I wanted to suggest a holiday, but without being overly blatant––so this mouse may just happen to wear red when delivering goods to mouse towns and villages in the snow.

Below in this blogpost I'll walk through the steps to creating it.

Reference:
This stock photo is the sled reference I used for the piece. I'd actually already drawn the mouse with their lantern when I decided I needed to dig for reference. At first, I didn't find sled designs I liked that felt rustic enough while also having space for the load of goods piled up. I was prepared to look at medieval carts with the plan to replace wheels with rails when I found this perfect sled. 


Layout:
As I mentioned before, I started with the mouse in a fur lined coat holding a lantern. Then I used the above sled reference. I did bulk up most of the wooden pieces to make them a bit more fairy tale looking. I also added side walls (like on a kid's wagon). Then on a separate sheet I drew the bundle of goods. Some of those items are recognizable items (a pulley, a cauldron, sourdough bread, swords, bottles, a bolt of tartan fabric etc) but some are just boxes and odd shapes meant to imply important goods. I drew a pine bough (using a photo as reference) but when I had everything scanned and added some quick color blocking, I found that the area needed more density, and quickly painted in more shape.

Inks:
With the above layout all set, I printed out the image (onto two sheets of legal paper that had to be registered and taped back together). I inked this piece on my Twitch stream on a Huion lightpad. Using the lightpad I could see through the 12" x 12" Strathmore bristol to the printout below so I could use it as a pencil guide. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens.

While the mouse and snowy ground were fairly straight forward, there was a lot to take into account in the sled's contents so they read as a mass, but also as separate objects--which also had to be different than the pine background.


Flats:
When the inks were done I scanned them into Photoshop and started the coloring process. In this step I am filling in each area with a flat color (no rendering, no textures)–it's like a professional version of coloring-in-the-lines. The character and setting's colors were fairly established in the layout stage, but  getting all the items in the sled to read took a long time of color selecting.

At this stage I also establish the color holds (areas where I want the lineart to be a color other than black) snow and the tartan pattern and the liquid & labels in/on the bottles.


Final:
I rendered the piece using dodge and burn tools as well as a stock texture brush to add all the light, shadow, and texture. The lantern light really set the rendering for this piece, so I had to get the snow shadows and warm highlights established, then get the character lit in those same terms before I could start on the sled or goods. I added in a digital thumbprint trail for his pipe smoke, and digitally painted falling snow.


Tuesday, November 29, 2022

October Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar Art

This year I'm releasing a Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar. I'll be taking copies with me to Baltimore and selling them through my Online Store. I created seven new pieces of artwork specifically for the calendar (even numbered months mainly). The new pieces were all drawn at 12" x 12" (the size of the Calendar itself)

To the left you can see the final art piece for October. I didn't want to do a spooky October piece, but I did think it should have a pumpkin in it, so I came up with a lantern-lit pumpkin-cider booth...inside a pumpkin

Below in this blogpost I'll walk through the steps to creating it.


Reference:
This istock photo is one of many many many pumpkin photos I looked at for reference before starting the piece. This photo helped me more with the look of the ground cover and the pumpkin leaf greenery behind the pumpkin booth. So while I did look at this image, I didn't directly reference it (or any of the other dozens of wild growing pumpkins I found photos of), but looked at it for inspiration.


Layout:
The first step was the pumpkin booth. I wanted there to be a bit of an up-angle for our view so that we could see the wall thickness of the pumpkin rather than it being obscured by the canopy. Once I had the pumpkin, bar, barrels, and leaves drawn I scanned them into Photoshop and figured out where in the frame it would fit. The placement I chose meant I had to draw more greenery on top as well as all the mouse characters on a separate sheet of copy paper (using a small prinout of what I already had on a lightpad). I added in the rope lines for the lanterns digitally and drew the lanterns themselves on the same sheet as the mice.

Inks:
With the above layout all set, I printed out the image (onto two sheets of legal paper that had to be registered and taped back together). I inked this piece on my Twitch stream on a Huion lightpad. Using the lightpad I could see through the 12" x 12" Strathmore bristol to the printout below so I could use it as a pencil guide. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens.

There was a lot of density of texture on the floor and in the background, so I tried to be simple with any tones I added to the barrels, mouse clothes, or pumpkin.

Flats:
When the inks were done I scanned them into Photoshop and started the coloring process. In this step I am filling in each area with a flat color (no rendering, no textures)–it's like a professional version of coloring-in-the-lines. Many of the colors were obvious from nature for the scene, but it still took some time to dial in specific hues and tones for them. How light or dark, how saturated, how warm, how cool, etc. I fiddled with for a bit before starting the actual coloring

At this stage I also establish the color holds (areas where I want the lineart to be a color other than black) on the lanterns and cider.


Final:

I rendered the piece using dodge and burn tools as well as a stock texture brush to add all the light, shadow, and texture. There was a play of light in this piece (the light coming from inside the pumpkin as well as from the lanterns) that was a hard thing to render without also over-rendering and overworking the piece. I hope that I found the balance so that it just feels like a fun crisp air evening where there's plenty of warmth from the setting and company.

The Calendar is available in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/mouse-guard-2023-calendar


Tuesday, November 22, 2022

August Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar Art

This year I'm releasing a Mouse Guard 2023 Calendar. I'll be taking copies with me to Baltimore and selling them through my Online Store. I created seven new pieces of artwork specifically for the calendar (even numbered months mainly). The new pieces were all drawn at 12" x 12" (the size of the Calendar itself)

To the left you can see the final art piece for August. Inspired by tomatoes growing in my back yard, I wanted something more pastoral and calm featuring plants and food.

Below in this blogpost I'll walk through the steps to creating it.

Reference:
In our back yard Julia grows a few different types of tomatoes. These were growing in a raised bed and while Julia was away dog-siting for her sister for a week I was watering them this summer. Unfortunately, we only were able to enjoy a few of them before critters started taking nibbles out of each one that was even close to ripe.


Well, I was starting work on the calendar project when Julia was away, and I liked the shapes and colors, thinking every time I watered it that it would be a good backdrop for a piece. Here's a pic I grabbed on one of those watering sessions.

Layout:
I started with re-drawing the photo using the reference. I needed to crop the image down and figure out how I was going to handle rendering the texture of the leaves. I then drew a farmer mouse with a wooden pitchfork(?) standing watch over his harvest. But the piece needed more, so I added a little band of musicians who I guess are celebrating the bounty. And then I still felt like it needed more, so I added three fur Karner Blue butterflies to help the scene. I do feel like this is an illustration that got away from me in terms of composition or focus, but then somehow worked itself out through no fault of my own.

Inks:
With the above layout all set, I printed out the image (onto two sheets of legal paper that had to be registered and taped back together). I inked this piece on my Twitch stream on a Huion lightpad. Using the lightpad I could see through the 12" x 12" Strathmore bristol to the printout below so I could use it as a pencil guide. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens.

I inked a lot of the mice with the 0.3 nib Multiliner rather than the 0.7 I do most everything else with. This piece is all about density of detail and texture distributed within some orbs of open space.

Flats:
When the inks were done I scanned them into Photoshop and started the coloring process. In this step I am filling in each area with a flat color (no rendering, no textures)–it's like a professional version of coloring-in-the-lines. TSome of the colors I was able to eye-dropper from the original reference photo. The butterflies were interpreted from photo references, and the mice were colored to not clash or blend in with the scene.

At this stage I also establish the color holds (areas where I want the lineart to be a color other than black) on the water droplets.


Final:
I rendered the piece using dodge and burn tools as well as a stock texture brush to add all the light, shadow, and texture. Getting the the tomatoes rendered was first priority since the amound of realism & volume in them would discate how far I had to push everything else. I had some fun using a freehand lasso tool (with a slight feather) and changed the color balance several times around the butterfly wings to give more color depth and a slight iridescence. 

The Calendar is available in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/mouse-guard-2023-calendar


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