Tuesday, May 11, 2021

The Buck-Toothed Yahbex

Last Friday on my Twitch Stream, we did the fifth community draw-along event #DrawTheExtinct where I posted an image from an old block print I made with a few animal photo inspiration prompts and the idea to create an imaginary extinct animal. I worked on my piece live on my Twitch stream while viewers worked at home and then on Monday we shared our finished pieces. 

Here is my finished Buck-Toothed Yahbex. And below are my steps to create it as well as the community submissions.



We started with the prompts of my original linocut print & sketch from a piece titled 'Extinct' as well as a yak, an ibex, and a beaver (specifically the teeth of the beaver and the horns of the ibex). I named the creature the Buck-Toothed Yahbex.

I told the viewers that they could use any combination of the inspiration prompts––they could make their version as cute and cuddly as a pocket pet stray kitten, as monstrous and deadly as a giant kaiju destroying cities, or anything in between. I also wanted this to be an excuse to get their pencils moving. I invited all skill levels, because I'm a firm believer that you shouldn't have to be good at something or pursuing mastery of it to just simply enjoy the act of it...and art is no exception.


On the Friday stream I started drawing with mechanical pencil on a sheet of copy paper to try and reimagine the beast. One of my problems to solve was how to fit a tall animal into the space of the final composition without losing details and I decided to work on the anatomy of it laying down. The image here is after I'd scanned my pencils into Photoshop and made some proportion checks and moved the hear around a bit.



After I'd locked in my above design, I printed that piece out on copy paper and taped it to the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol. Using a lightpad, I was able to see through the surface of the bristol as I inked the Buck-Toothed Yahbex. I used a Copic Multiliner 0.7 SP pen to ink the art. I was still streaming this portion on Twitch, though as my end of stream time was coming up, I was nervous I wouldn't finish in time. Turned out, I was able to get the last bits of ibex-style horn inked as I said goodbye to everyone watching and offered encouragement as they worked on theirs over the weekend. 


Off stream I scanned the inked artwork into Photoshop to prep it for final color. First thing was to drop it into the template I have for #DrawTheExtinct pieces with the border, background, and a base shadow already established. Then I started drawing in flat colors. This part of coloring (called flatting) is just a professional digital version of coloring-in-the-lines to establish the color areas.

My color choices were somewhat based on the original lino print, but I tried to make the fur closer to a realistic and believable grey rather than blue.


Below you can again see the final rendered corrected colors with a border and type applied. 




But, as this is a community event, I wanted to share all the other entries posted in the Discord. I awarded a prize and we voted together on a few more (prize winners marked with *) on Monday's Twitch stream and we all enjoyed seeing what each other had done. I hope we get even more participants next month (first Friday!)

Cortrah

AU Tiger


Dark


Evil Cartoonist


Flannel Wizard*

KFlagg*

RedJarOJam

Sarahs_Crumbs (wip)


Serarel


Shnookerdoodle*


Tyrie*


VernNYC*



 

No comments:

Blog Archive