Sunday, February 13, 2011

Happy Valentine's Day

Brush and Ink, digital Color - Click to Enlarge
Welcome to Made of Lines, Love EditionI know that it's been a while since I've posted, but that doesn't mean I don't love you Baby.  Now, I know you've been hurt before, but I'm here to make it all better.  Let's fill that hole in your heart with A FREE PRINTABLE VALENTINE created by Yours Truly. 

1.Click here to download the printable Valentine
2. Click here to download the Valentine Interior

If you like the card, do me a favor and share this link with your friends on Facebook and Twitter.  Why do you have love, if not to share it?      ----------------------------------------------->

Printing tip:  I set my printer to borderless printing and the cards turned out great.  I used Avery Note Cards, but you can use whatever paper you have around.  Cardstock or photopapers would be best.  All you have to do is print and cut that beautiful baby down the middle.  Bingo-bango!  You now have 2 copies of the cutest little Valentine to come out this year. 

Original Art and the finished product
* I included the interior for those who would like it, but I recommend using the inside to write a special message for your sweetie.  Something along the lines of, "I know you aren't into flowers so I got you a card with bugs on it."  Awww yeah!  It's business time.

Click to Enlarge



This card is more than a year in the making.  I created the original pencil sketch as a Valentine for my lady last year (she being of the flower hating/bug loving majority).  I like the concept, but I wanted to take it further.  This year I stretched out the image so that the card would have a continuous front and back.  I printed this sketch in light blue (20% cyan for you art nerds - leave a message if you want more info on this).  I then inked over my light blue print.  I rescanned the image, removed the light blue lines, and colored the whole thing in Photoshop. 

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Sunday, January 16, 2011

The Batman

Brush and Ink - Click to Enlarge
PUNKS BEWARE!

I have had an itch to put brush and ink to paper.   Today I scratched it.  Scratching it didn't help.  It just turned into a rash that looks like Batman.  Weird!

I called my Dermatologist.  He told me that it wasn't a rash, but a drawing.  He also told me that having an itch doesn't always mean having an itch.  That is even weirder than my Batman shaped rash.  I think I need a new Dermatologist.






About the drawing:  This is one of those sketches that I created without even an inkling (sweet pun) of a plan.  I had a piece of watercolor paper, a brush and some ink.  It is always one helluva party when art supplies and the subconscious get together.   You never know who else will show up.  Could be a mouse on a mission.  Often it is Wolverine.  Sometimes it's David Byrne or a fowl-esque dragon.  Today Batman arrived in a dark alley.  Helluva party! 

Start to finish, the sketch probably took 25-30 minutes.  It is a mess, as it should be.  I didn't plan a bit of it.  The anatomy is a mess.  There is no clear light source.  Some parts are way over-done (head and face).  Others are way under-done (the mist/smoke effect).  There are some bits that I really like about it.  This is the first time I played with dry-brush on rough cold-press paper as an inking technique.  Cool effect.  I really like it in the bricks.  I also enjoy the brushwork in the cape, though I am still trying to suss out what is appealing about it.  What I like more than anything else is the smirk on the dark knight's face.  It looks as though he is really going to enjoy whatever punishment he is about to dish out on some punks.  Batman as a maniac vigilante always made a lot more sense to me than Batman as a super hero.

Friday, December 24, 2010

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!

I put this video-blog together for my elementary students, comparing the artistic process to the writing process that we follow in school.  A lot of kids began drawing snowman pictures after watching it.  Very cool.  Since it follows my process from conception to completion, I figured I should share it on my art blog.  Just keep in mind that the target audience ranged from 5 to 10 years old (and I'm no Bob Ross).




Watercolor - Click to Enlarge

Pencil- Click to Enlarge
Pencil - Click to Enlarge

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Valley of the Shadow

"Her hungry yellow eyes examined his mousey frame - measured the distance between them.
He stood defiant." 



Sunday, October 31, 2010

Happy Halloween!

I bust my hump all weekend on this report, and she can't even look me in the eye.  What am I to her?  Just a pair of feet?

I should report her, but then I may never get the promotion.  What can I do?


Harassment in the workplace is a complex issue.  

Just ask Bigfoot.

 _________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Friday, September 10, 2010

"Take me!" the buzzard longingly whispered in the alligator's ear.

Click to Enlarge
Is it the pinnacle of nerdiness or the zenith of dweebery?  Whichever it may be, I was it last night.  On Thursday, Septermber 9th, from 7 until 10 p.m. I sat alone in my room and drew a dragon.

LIGHTNING BOLT!

I began by sketching out my beastly friend very roughly using a Photoshop airbrush and my Wacom tablet.  After my evil eyed Eragon was generally laid out, I switched to the dodge and burn tools.  This allowed me to focus solely on the lights and darks of this malevolently mouthed menace.  I have found that using the dodge and burn tools can sometimes create a shiny, almost slimy affect.  Perfect for creeping creepers and dripping drool.

LIGHTNING BOLT!





Click to Enlarge and Check out that Drool
Once I was satisfied, I set my lascivious lizard layer into multiply mode.  This let the white parts of my gray-scale gargoyle become transparent, essentially making my dastardly drawing into a 21ist century coloring book page.  I began digitally painting with absolute freedom, knowing that my black and white rendering was solid and would hold the picture together despite any ham-handed coloring.  One thing to watch out for when working in multiply mode, is that your highlights will dull out as you fill in those glowing whites with color.  To counteract this problem, I simply added another layer on top called highlights, and airbrushed those shiny moments back into existence.  This was especially important in the eye, teeth, and all that glorious drool.

*Doesn't my dragon look like the long lost child of a buzzard and an alligator?  That must have been quite the romance.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Turn on the Blue Light

Click to Enlarge
I worked up a quick digital painting of a kid in some sort of mysterious glow.  No real concept.  I was just playing with the blue light from below. 

All in all, this isn't terrible for an experiment.  I like some of the forms (particularly around the brows) and some of the lighting effects.  This could serve as a nice preliminary sketch that could be taken much further with a little pre-painting research.

Monday, September 6, 2010

A Quick Watercolor Sketch

As it so often seems to do, life intercedes (or is it interferes?).  I have been, and will continue to be incredibly busy for the foreseeable future.  While I have to acknowledge that my art output and ambitions will be slowing down due to some important obligations, I will not be giving in or up.  I will continue to post on this blog while working my way toward the life I have always wanted and have been working for since I could hold a pencil.  There are no roadblocks insurmountable, only detours.

That said, I suspect that my posts will be briefer and my artwork more of the sketch variety.  My hope is that the new "quick and dirty" Made of Lines will prove to be even more fruitful and satisfying moving forward.

This weekend I worked up this quick watercolor sketch.  Clearly I was thinking of my Despereaux digital painting.  I have been looking at this sketch all weekend, reminded of the wonderful vitality of the watercolor medium, and its storytelling potential.

Onward...

Monday, August 23, 2010

Heroes on the Half Shell

Pencil w/digital color - Click to Enlarge
Between the ages of 8 and 11, I drew very little that wasn't some sort of mutated animal sporting a non projectile weapon.  Ninja monkeys being the most common.  A few weeks ago, when visiting with my co-conspirator in the creation of a martial menagerie, we reflected on those ninja monkeys, even proving to each other that we still knew how to draw the battle ready beasties.

In honor of of various ninja animals covering the worksheets of third graders around the globe I present to you...Raphael of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - muse of pre-adolescent boys.

 
I wish I could find some original monkey drawings.  They would be proof positive that anyone can learn to draw.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

I'm an ordinary guy...

Digital Paint - Click to Enlarge

Watch out!  You might get what you're after.
Cool baby!  Strange but not a stranger.
I'm an ordinary guy 
Burning down the house

Burning Down the House
Talking Heads



Friday, August 20, 2010

Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening

Digital Paint - Click to Enlarge
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.

My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.

He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound's the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.

The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

                                                                       Robert Frost
                                                                       New Hampshire
                                                                       1923