Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Magic the Gathering: Azure Beastbinder

Last year I was asked by Wizards of the Coast to do some Magic the Gathering card art for their upcoming animal set Bloomburrow (https://magic.wizards.com/en/products/bloomburrow). I played a lot of MtG back in the mid/late 90's, so it was an honor and thrill to become a part of the fraternity of MtG illustrators.

The final card of mine from Bloomburrow that was revealed is Azure Beastbinder.

 The set was released in early August, and I'm happy to share the artwork and process for creating it.

The process started with the brief from my art director asking for a Ratfolk rogue sliding underneath a Calamity Beast slicing its underbelly with a dagger that turns the wound into blue smoke or vapor. WotC provided me with an enormous PDF with reference for the rats and their clothing (In this case they asked specifically for japanese Aizome triangular patches) and weaponry for Bloomburrow, as well as reference for the Calamity Beast. 

I started with a rough version of the rat in a power slide pose and did a few versions before I put it on a lightpad to draw it out more tightly and add in all the clothing details as well as the dagger. Before I drew the Calamity beast in pencil, I think I scanned in the rat, then painted a blocky mass where I wanted the creature, then printed that out to do the drawing seen here.


The pencil roughs were all assembled and combined digitally in Photoshop. For the magic vapor wound I painted with a cyan color in Photoshop and had a stroke applied to that layer to give me an outline.

At this stage, I also like to do a preliminary digital color blocking, to make sure I have the color and value tangents worked out, and also to show my art director at WotC so they are on the same page as I am (no one likes surprises in the later stages of a commissioned art piece). This is the stage where I can also easily make adjustments moving a character or resizing something.


With the pencils/layouts approved by my art director, Aliana Rood,  I moved on to inks. I printed the digital composite out and taped it to the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol. On my Huion Lightpad, I was able to see through the surface of the bristol to use the printout as a guide as I inked with Copic Multiliner SP pens. I did more texture on this card than any of my others, but I think it works in the end with color.


The inks were then scanned back into Photoshop where I could start the coloring process. This stage. called flatting' is the professional version of coloring-in-the-lines. Just flat color is placed in to establish everything's base colors. the art director also liked when my linework was softer in my Mouse Guard work, and wanted everything to have a dark brown color hold (ink lines colored to be something other than black). I also established other color holds on the vapor wound and the rocky background.

Here are the final rendered colors for the art (sans card borders). I did the light and shadow and texture by using the dodge and burn tools in Photoshop with a stock textured brush.

I have prints of this piece available for sale: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/category/magic

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

The Tick for Baltimore Yearbook 2024

Every year the Baltimore Comic Con has published a convention art book called 'The Baltimore Yearbook' that features a character or property, where that creator is a guest of the convention. Selected guest artists are asked to contribute a piece of fan art for the book to celebrate the creator and property. It allows us to play in someone's world, and offers a chance for attendees to meet new creators as they go around the show floor collecting autographs in their yearbook.

This year's subject is Ben Edlund's The Tick! To the left you can see my finished art, and below in the blogpost I'll walk through my process.



I started with a drawing of The Tick––and then started realizing how difficult it might be for me to include the sense of humor and parody to the piece. I looked up all the other characters that appeared in the comics and animated series, even thought of including characters from The Plotmasters...but none of those spoke to me. 

We are always encouraged to include our own characters into our Yearbook piece--to create a cross-over image that might not have otherwise happened. I'm always hesitant to add mice from Mouse Guard into these pieces, but it dawned on me that I could parody my own characters with a close-but-not-quite version called Vole Patrol. That's when the line 'No more Mr. nice mice' came into my head. I drew vole versions of my characters on copy paper along with the banner and digitally added them in to the pencils I had of the Tick and blocked in some colors.

I then printed out the digital assembly above at 14 x 17 and taped it to the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol board. On my Huion lightpad, I can see through the surface of the bristol down to the printout to use it as a guide to ink by. I used Copic Multiliner pens (mostly the 0.7 nib) to do all the inkwork.

I debated inking in the balloon and text, but to make the original art more salable (available at the auction in Baltimore), I opted to ink it in. I kept Tick open linework mostly, only adding a little bit of weight/texture to the contour lines. The voles I inked like I'd ink my mice and the groundcovering became my dark anchor visual.


With the inks finished it was time to start coloring the piece. I scanned the inks and began laying in flat colors. This part of the process is called 'flatting' where the color areas are all established with flat colors (no shading, no rendering, no textures, no effects). While the Tick's colors are closer to correct here, I flatted in false colors for everything else––sometimes having bold wrong colors helps you see that you're staying in the lines.

In this step I also established all the color holds (areas where I want the ink lines to be a color other than black) like the text, banner stripes, lantern glow and fading the ground covering.

After I quickly switched all the bold vole colors to the correct ones, the last step was to do the final rendering and lighting effects for the piece. I did this mostly using the dodge and burn tools and a stock Photoshop brush.

This piece will be published in the Baltimore Yearbook later this month. That book will be available for purchase at the convention and through the con's website afterwards. The original inked piece will also be for sale in the art auction at the con on Saturday.


Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Milan Gwendolyn

The piece you see to the left is a 12" x 12" inked piece that is up for bid at the Hero Initiative Auction at Baltimore Comic Con (along with pieces by Sanford Greene, Chris Bachalo, Steve Purcell, Stan Sakaim Kevin Nowlan, Paul Smith, Walt Simonson, Kevin Eastman, and many many more). You do not need to be at the auction to bid, you can bid by proxy (as long as you email your high-bid in by Sept. 16th.

More info about the auction on the Hero Initiative Website:
https://www.heroinitiative.org/portfolio-item/2024-baltimore-comic-con-auction/

For this blogpost though, I wanted to walk you through the creation of the piece and its upcoming use...

In the sprint, Julia and I attended Lake Como Comic Art Festival, and on our way there we spent a few days in Milan. There we had a guided tour of the Duomo and saw the statue of the Madonna perched on the tallest spire of the rooftop (we were on the roof when I took this photo). I loved the pose and thought it would be great to do a homage with a Matriarch of the Guard.

And as always I also take photos of various tile floors, grates, and inlays when in other cities...so I opened my Milan photos for inspiration for a background.


In pencil on copy paper I drew a version of Gwendolyn in the Madonna pose (or as closely as I could make that mouse anatomy fit).

I scanned that in and dropped it into a Photoshop file with the correct dimensions for the finished art and resized and positioned my pencil drawing. 

The star circle was created using some Photoshop tools and the brass floor grate photo was dropped in for a pattern in the background.



The above layout was printed out and taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol. On my Huion lightpad I can see through the bristol surface to see the printout as a guide while I ink. To ink this I used Copic Multiliner SP pens (I think I only used the 0.7 nib)

Making good clean lines on this piece was imperative for me since I knew the original was getting donated for the Hero Initiative auction.


But I also intend to use it elsewhere...


And the first place this art will be used is for the newest Mouse Guard tee which will make its debut at Baltimore Comic Con and go in my online store shortly afterwards.


Again, to bid on the original inked drawing you can either come to auction at the Baltimore Comic Con or proxy bid by email by Sept. 16th.

More info about the auction on the Hero Initiative Website:
https://www.heroinitiative.org/portfolio-item/2024-baltimore-comic-con-auction/


Tuesday, September 3, 2024

Santa Barbara Courhouse Commission

Last September, my friend Stephen Christy and his partner Dominique were married. You may recognize Stephen's name––He was an integral part of bringing Archaia back from it's early collapse, in shepherding the deal between Archaia and Henson, and for being the film liaison for a Mouse Guard movie since the earliest offers came in right up to being a producer on the FOX movie we started. 

I was contacted by a friend of Stephen's who wanted to commission me to draw the Santa Barbara Courthouse where they had their ceremony for him to give as a wedding gift.

I accepted the commission and started with going through lots of publicly available photos of the building as well as a few 3D models on shared model libraries. Once I had a photo, I printed it out and then on a light pad, drew a refined pencil version––tracing the form, but also interpreting how I'd manage the details and complexity in just line and texture.

With the pencil drawing done, I scanned it into photoshop and sized it to match the final art (10" x 10"). I also tinted the linework to make it easier to see for the next step, and painted in some areas where I knew I wanted to add shadows with texture. The last step was to add a horizontal line guide to help me when it came tim to ink something in the sky area.

A printout of that version was taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore bristol, and on my lightpad I was able to do the final inked drawing with Copic Multiliner SP pens. 

There was a lot of structural detail to get right in the tower, the arch and the windows, so I used a slightly smaller nib size than I normally would, and then built up the stippling for the shadows slowly to make sure I was never losing the forms of the architecture.

I was honored to get to draw a piece to be gifted to Stephen and Dom for their wedding. Happy Anniversary!