Happy Halloween!
These characters were from a Baltimore Yearbook and later a silkscreened poster I made to celebrate the spooky holiday. I've isolated them for these printouts as well as included the poem I wrote for the occasion
Here is my finished colored Dragon (twenty first in the series). And below are my steps to create it as well as the community submissions.
This month the prompt was three words: Octopus, Talon, & Royal
I opened several tabs of google image searches of octopus species, bird talons, and crowns.
With the above design printed out at full scale and taped that onto the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol, it was time to start inking. Using a lightpad, I was able to see through the surface of the bristol as I inked the dragon. I used Copic Multiliner 0.7 pen to ink the art.
The inking on this piece was about balancing the lighter hand I needed to not overwork the underbelly and to get the details on the suckers looking fleshy, and then being more textured and heavy-handed when it came to the skin pattern.
I wasn't able to finish my inks on stream before having to sign off an wish every one success over the weekend with their Dragons. Later that same night after some dinner I finished inking the last few tentacles and then scanned the inks and started the flatting process. In addition to the basics of color flatting–basically professional coloring-in-the-lines, I also established color holds (an area where I want the ink to be a color other than black)––the overall lines became a dark brown, the skin pattern got two different color holds and the pupil got one as well.Most of of the color selections were already established in the rough, but I played with the final value/hue choices for a while before getting to this point.
For the final colors I used a bit of the paintbrush to add some color variance to each area before using the dodge and burn tools to do the final rendering.
Below you can again see the final Dragon...