{"id":3410,"date":"2013-10-30T00:01:59","date_gmt":"2013-10-30T07:01:59","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.beanleafpress.com\/?p=3410"},"modified":"2013-10-30T12:08:10","modified_gmt":"2013-10-30T19:08:10","slug":"shop-talk-how-i-draw","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost:821\/shop-talk-how-i-draw\/","title":{"rendered":"Shop Talk: How I draw…"},"content":{"rendered":"
A lot of people have asked me if I would be willing to show my illustration process. I am not opposed to the idea, the only problem was figuring out a way that I could film the process and make it at least interesting.<\/p>\n
Well with the help of some friends, who supplied the equipment and ideas,\u00a0 a lot of patience from my sweetheart and some sweet rigging device constructed around my art table I found a way to do. Though there are still some things to perfect, I am pleased with the outcome. In 4 min I was able to capture most of my illustration technique.<\/p>\n
One of the coolest things about art is there are literally hundreds of ways to get the end results. The key is to find what works for you.<\/p>\n
So lets break it down.<\/p>\n
1. the Blank page<\/strong>. It all starts here. In fact when I sat down to do this, I decided that I would start with an empty mind and an empty sheet.\u00a0 As you notice, I work all over the page. I find that easier for me and I don’t get bored with it. I also sketch with red pencil. I just like the way it feels and it is not as dirty when I get to step 3.<\/p>\n 2. Its all in the sketch.<\/strong> I like to draw loose and I sketch loose as well. I find that if I tighten up my work gets stiff.\u00a0 I will though clean and tighten things up as I get to more of a finished piece, but until then I need continue to stay fluid. On a side note: I do use rulers at times, but to start I usually trust my judgement, and I wanted this to be pure freehand.<\/p>\n 3. Inks…<\/strong> When I am happy with the pencils I tape a sheet of Tracing\/vellum paper over the piece. I prefer Canson Tracing- nice weight and whiteness. I use microns to ink and painters tape to keep them together. I have no need for a light table- the tracing paper works perfectly.<\/p>\n Why tracing paper? Well no cleanup and when I scan I get a perfect clean line. You can’t beat it.<\/p>\n When I start as you might notice, I am all over the map. Also my hand hardly touches the paper. Micron dries rather quickly, but it will still smear right after you lay it down, if you are not paying attention. It takes a bit to get used to, yet once you do, you will never go back.<\/p>\n 4. Trusting your hand<\/strong>– Midway through – after I get the main lines finished, I pull the paper off and continue to ink, without a pencil guide. I do this on all my pieces, unless it comes from another penciller which I will then stay true to their lines. Yet on my own, I love to let inspiration flow and texture for me needs to feel natural. This also allows me to work quickly. I do though keep the pencils on the side as a reference.<\/p>\n 5. The scan-<\/strong> ok here is the reason why my inkwork looks clean on screen. I scan my images as a 300dpi bitmap and then convert to gray.\u00a0 By scanning as a bitmap, this allows a true positive\/negative ratio. When you start you will need to play with the settings on contrast.<\/p>\n So here it is- the main thing is to stay loose and don’t be afraid to let inspiration take over. Yet there are times when you need to be tight and so it is good to understand how to use a ruler, but for fun… it’s really all about you.<\/p>\n Also I am open to questions as well. There are many other little things that I do here and there that I dont talk about, but this is the basic feel to it. One day I will approach how I color.<\/p>\n Keep creating-<\/p>\n trav<\/p>\n