 |
Step 1:
Using a smooth textured paper and a customized sketching pencil, I do a quick drawing of my character. My sketching pencil is set on grainy build up and I also make it size/pressure sensitive. This gives it a certain brush-like quality.
|
 |
Step 2:
With a chalk set on grainy build-up, I then work out the values in the piece. Note: I'm using a warm sepia for both my pencil and my chalk because I want the finished painting to have and overall warm and dark feeling.
|
 |
Step 3:
I create a new layer and set it to multiply. On this layer, I begin to loosely work in tone and local color. Working on a layer allows me to preserve my original sketch.
|
 |
Step 4:
Once I'm comfortable with the overall color, I flatten the image and begin to paint directly into the piece. At this point, I like to use oil brushes or oil pastels. The nice thing about these brushes is how the color from one stroke mixes and blends with color from another. I will often use the dropper tool to select, then use these subtle new colors that emerge from this mixing.
|
 |
Step 5:
I now finish the piece off by adding lights and some details. To add some more color and drama to the painting, I add thick red paint to the background using one of the Artists' Oils. Doing this on a layer allows me to add and subtract the paint with out altering my original image.
|