@Mordruinn: yeah i agree..u should join the contest. :mrgreen: c'mon,c'mon!
@Mordruinn: yeah i agree..u should join the contest. :mrgreen: c'mon,c'mon!
Pwede? Asa nako i post, sa comic art jam nga thread?
@Mordruinn: Of course, your drawing was competently done. I like how you drew the spine bai. I'm just curious if you deliberately left its mouth shadow-free? Is it for effect?
Please post your drawing at the "comic book club art jam" and say it's your entry for the creature design contest. Voting starts on Monday, awarding next Sunday. The prize selections are an Al Rio sketchbook (not original), 2 sets of 1 pair FHM Top 100. The winner selects which prize he or she wants, then the rest get the left-overs.
Ok. Thanks. Yah, the mouth is kinda illuminated by inner flame. Sige ako lang i post didto nga thread.
you mean like this:Originally Posted by rj325
Just an old drawing in graphite:
Pax.
@Junpei: Bwahahaha! You gotta join us man. We need your kind of humor. To answer your question, July 2 (this Sunday) bai. Stay tuned na lang sa comic book drawing club thread for the venue (napuol na mi Bigby's).
@HoundedbyHeaven: Cool drawing bai! Did you use a blending tool or did you just use multiple layers of different graded graphite?
As I'm archiving my scanned drawings and paintings, I came across this poster color painting I did way back in college at USC-TC. In the spirit of the ongoing World Cup 2006 in Germany, I'm posting this here. Having used watercolor exclusively, I used to wonder then how poster colors are as a medium. Frustrated CAFA stude man ko so I decided to satisfy my curiousty. Hehe.
I think this opens up to a bigger image if you do a right-click and View Image...
[img width=500 height=363]http://www.renriquez.com/wordpress/wp-content/photos/michelplatini.jpg[/img]
Michel Platini of France during World Cup '86.
Blending tool? Yeah, I guess so. I was using a 2B mechanical pencil in shading the darkest areas, and then used those graphite blenders (made of tightly-rolled paper with a cone-shaped hard tip) to supply the lighter tones in the surrounding areas. I learned this from a Lee Hammond tutorial.Originally Posted by cmontoya
Draw on!
Pax.
Similar Threads |
|