Ratnap's random art

foervraengd:

Experimenting in finding a technique that suits me when it comes to paint detailed stuff like foliage in nature.

Please note that the program I use is Corel Painter 12 - not SAI or Photoshop.

I noticed that if I reduced the resaturation of my favourite painting brush to 3-4%, it got more affected by the background color. This is something I appreciate, since I love the thought of giving a painting a certain color theme.

Please note that on the two last pictures, I used the same green colors on each background color. But depending on which background color I use, the “primary and secondary” colors appears as either cooler or warmer.

So, my final conclusion is that it’s ALWAYS a better idea to start with the darkest values, and then add the midtones/highlights afterwards.

The size, shape and length of the strokes will also affect the overall appearance of the foliage. I recommend people who are afraid of painting foliage backgrounds to observe photographs/real life study.

Ask yourself:

- How will a bush/tree/grass look like if I use small and round strokes? And how would long, thin strokes make it appear?

- How would it appear if I used a different color than green for the foliage?

- How many different designs of bushes, grass, plants and trees can I paint/draw without looking at a reference? 

- How can I paint a green forest without the risk to make it appear “monochrome”?

Not for SAI, but some helpful suggestions on how to approach that stuff

samecity:
“ This was an experiment I ended up liking. I did it to draw this and this. Basically, it’s a quick way to get started on a painting. This is gonna be a face so I can show the details. I decided I want to draw a guy this time, with a smug...

samecity:

This was an experiment I ended up liking. I did it to draw this and this. Basically, it’s a quick way to get started on a painting. This is gonna be a face so I can show the details. I decided I want to draw a guy this time, with a smug expression. This should be fun.

THIS IS FOR PAINT TOOL SAI. You’d be doing yourself no favors trying it in Photoshop.

01. I fill the canvas with a dark, desaturated color. Above that I begin to block in colors in a shape that resembles what I’m painting.  The color I used is a peachy skin tone.

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02. Using a brown or tan color, I draw on some line art. It looks ridiculous right now and that’s ok. All of this is done on the same layer.

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03. On the same layer, I begin to block in colors (over the lines somewhat).  I’m concerned with just covering the blue of the canvas. I’m being bold with a lot of the color choices, but it’ll pay off.

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I use this little chart for starter skin colors:

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04. With my water color brush on these settings (the size/density get toggled, and usually on the side of larger + lighter opacity):

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I begin to blend with a sort of pinky peach color, to start. I blend all the colors together on the same layer, just basically mixing everything. I change the color depending on the saturation of the area being painted, so I switch to an orange for more red areas. Basically, try and match the colors. If you paint over a cooler area with a warmer watercolor, it will change it, of course.

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05. This is the brush I do the first few details with! I got it from Tumblr, you’ve probably seen it around, it’s that really good blend-y edit for the acrylic brush:

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(I toggle the size and opacity, but on the side of smaller + darker.)

I begin to pick up colors from both the canvas and the color wheel to make details. A lot of nice pretty colors are on our canvas already and it’d be a shame to waste them. But using the same colors to blend without eyedropping new ones will make the color palette a bit flat. Thus, I do both.

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06. I also tighten up with an airbrush on these settings, changing only the opacity and size. I remember that it is entirely possible to overpaint things, so I try and enhance what I’ve already done instead of trying to repaint it. This is a mistake I and a lot of artists make, I think.

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07. Still fixing up with the airbrush + watercolor (sparingly) + acrylic.

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08. Once I’ve made some headway on refining, I get a gigantic airbrush (about 200px) and turn down the opacity to about 8-11% and begin to brush some reds and yellows onto the face to warm it up. Alternately, I’ve brushed greens and blues and purples to cool skin before.

09. I pick my background color and begin to use it to clean up the edges.

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10. Last thing I do is paint his eyes! Time to export and edit the colors a bit in Photoshop. I try and fix them as much as I can in SAI with painting, but digital lends itself to the ability to fix quickly. Pretty much why I like to digital paint, besides it being cheap.

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11. Before I export, there’s a few things I can do to make it better. Since it’s kind of quick and cartoony, I can lightly line it and make it pop. Or I can refine further with a nice textured brush and make it look more realistic.  I dig the lines, so I’m going with those.

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12. After I PS it (which is nothing more than a linear contrast curves layer and some warming via selective color) I shrink, duplicate the image and run a Paint Daubs filter (both settings on 1) to sharpen it. I take down the opacity of the sharpened layer to about 40-60%. I’m done!

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When ego is siphoned off creativity, when creativity becomes one more thing we do, like the laundry, then it takes far less time to do it. Much of our desire for creative time has to do with our trying to coax ourselves into being in the right mood to create. We want to “feel like it,” and when we don’t, or don’t quickly, we think the solution is more time. Actually, the solution is less attention to the vagaries of mood. In short, creativity needs to become something daily, doable, and nonnegotiable, something as quotidian as breathing.

When we make a special occasion out of our art, we rob ourselves of the time we actually have. When we make a ceremony out of the right paper, the right noise level, the right pen and precise circumstance, we are actually creating many false conditions that make our art not more possible but more impossible. “I can’t think when it’s noisy” or “when the kids are home” or “when the phone’s going off.” We may not like thinking under those conditions, but we can think under them and we owe it to ourselves to learn that we can. By making our creativity nonnegotiable, we do it a little every day no matter what our mood and no matter what our judgement of our work. What we are after is the gut-level knowledge that our creativity is both doable and portable.

… The less precious we are about how and when we do our work, the more precious it can be to us. We are like parents who take their infant everywhere. The child learns to thrive in many environments, and so, too, can our brainchild, art.

- Julia Cameron, The Sound of Paper

Mostly transcribing this as a reminder to myself. Because it holds true for me, which is something I forget from time to time.

(via minorearth)

repede:
“ altabestudio:
“ Adding character diversity: Body type
“ Unique Features Tutorial Pt 1 by jeinu
”
Tips on how to draw not so cookie cutter characters! Change body type and shape, showing off natural differences in build that happen in real...

repede:

altabestudio:

Adding character diversity: Body type

Unique Features Tutorial Pt 1 by jeinu

Tips on how to draw not so cookie cutter characters! Change body type and shape, showing off natural differences in build that happen in real life! Not everyone is built the same!

Pt 2 and 3 will follow but check it out on the original posting on the artist’s deviant!

is that crash beside medic hahaha

crash used to be best character with spyro…

helpful!

art-and-sterf:
“ Abdomination: How to draw beef by ~Coelasquid
”
Hey I had already a part of that on my blog, no reason to not have the full thing!

art-and-sterf:

Abdomination: How to draw beef by ~Coelasquid

Hey I had already a part of that on my blog, no reason to not have the full thing!

bakaishere:

Soooo… I’ve been recieving a bunch of requests for tutorials on how to draw ponies… @.@

Altough I don’t think I’m the right person to teach, I made this little tutorial on how I draw ponies step by step, there are no anatomy references or intelligent notes… >_>”
But hey, I had a lot of fun making this one, not to mention practice is nevr bad! I really hope this is useful for you guys who want to start a tumblr or just want to try something different!

And one last advice, remember: when in doubt, use REFERENCES!!!

Please let me know if you want the other two done too (front and side), or if you’d like to know how I draw something else in particular, like different eyes styles or legs poses!
(And please be kind, this is my first tutorial… >w>”)

Luv ya,
Baka <3

Can never have enough pony tuts!

adurot:

ppdk:

mynameismad:

giancarlovolpe:

I did some compositional how-to’s in my early weeks at Warner Bros. studios.   I thought it’d be great to post a series of these on the Tumblr’s for beginning board artists.

This is the first part - the rule of thirds.

This is how I lay out a lot of things!!

Did not know this. 

Now will attempt to use this forever.

One of the best reasons to Follow ppdk besides his charming personality is he reblogs the best art tutorials.

Eww composition, but this will sooner or later get at me <.<

summers-melody:
“ Communicating with Colours by ~kari-kitties
My guide which roughly explains colour symbolism.
Click-through for full view on dA.
”

summers-melody:

Communicating with Colours by ~kari-kitties

My guide which roughly explains colour symbolism.

Click-through for full view on dA.

eyecager:

Open Link in New Tab for bigger sizing.

Tutorials/Progressions done by Gimaldinov Arthur.

Head over to his DA for more! Also he has some killer brush sets.

This is interesting!

inkydonkey:

dredsina:

broadfields asked you: Could you possibly do a mouth tutorial? Unless you’ve already done so. In that case, possibly pointing me in the right direction? :]

I wash my hands of this. It’s evidence of my piss-poor design skills.

This is why I normally draw skulls first and then a face on top of it.

Uh tuts!

rayray18draws:

i was feeling kinda down today because i got a little disturbing comment on an art work of mine and it got me down a bit and that i should work harder (and stuff), but then an amazing artist i look up to told me another artist told him this ..

“A style is everything we do wrong all the time….

Why tutorial tag? Because those are wise words an artist should keep in mind

mechanized:

eridangerous:

heysawbones:

stereofidelic:

eyecager:

Gradient Tutorial- Right Click + New tab to see it bigger

Source- http://nanya.deviantart.com/

This is something I try to stress to everyone. Improved my understanding of shading tenfold.

I still suffer from this when I forget to lay down a light map/paint in a rough gradient before I start working. This is helpful!

I can’t believe how much even just reading this helps lskdfjdsklg definitely gonna remember to keep this in mind.

i’ve recommended this tutorial to people quite a lot, so just gonna…reblog this here yes

Blergh, shading and this explains very well what I’m doing wrong with each and every picture *hides*

dredsina:

Sorry for making such a huge post! I was just concerned about some of the bigger pictures being viewable, so I didn’t want to make this a text post…

art-and-sterf:
“ Rock Wall Tutorial by *liiga
”
greytaliesin:
“ A super quick trick for drawing draped fabric that my art teacher taught me in high school.
”
helpful o.O

greytaliesin:

A super quick trick for drawing draped fabric that my art teacher taught me in high school.

helpful o.O