- Joined
- Nov 14, 2012
outlines with no backgrounddo you mean more shades of gray or more contrast
i can set color of any of segments if needed
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outlines with no backgrounddo you mean more shades of gray or more contrast
i can set color of any of segments if needed
Yes. Try to clean the lines up as much as possible so it looks good as letter head and envelope markings. It's getting very good.did a quick thing in paint
like this?
Did inking so the tracing would be less retardedYes. Try to clean the lines up as much as possible so it looks good as letter head and envelope markings. It's getting very good.
The final touch would be an SVG version with some engraving lines for depth. Not much, just some sketchiness
Or alternatively i can add engraving lines to make it in half shadeDid inking so the tracing would be less retarded
Do you want right side of the body completely dark is it fine like this
and the first attempt with the rock
I'll make something after work (especially some suggestions for how to do engraving-type lines on this), but my one suggestion is to make his outer profile smoother and simpler and save the broader muscle details for the inside. Imagine a very smooth and curvy outer profile over his entire body.-snip-
put more effort into engravingI'll make something after work (especially some suggestions for how to do engraving-type lines on this), but my one suggestion is to make his outer profile smoother and simpler and save the broader muscle details for the inside. Imagine a very smooth and curvy outer profile over his entire body.
So try to draw, for example, his shin/calf/hamstrings/biceps and triceps with a smoother single curved poly stroke. The human eye views hard curved lines as a peak contrast. It kind of hacks the baby part of our brain (one of the reasons kids like black line high contrast cartoons) because our brains first learned to see depth contrast between sharp lines before anything else. It makes the figure POP to our brain and seem whole despite being smoother. Kind of a contradiction but it works.
That's the right direction, I think. The devil is in the details and perfecting the engraver's hatching will end up being 99% of the work - but we'll get there!Yeah, put more effort into engraving
I'm just afraid of doing it too fine because we need to worry about small sizes.That's the right direction, I think. The devil is in the details and perfecting the engraver's hatching will end up being 99% of the work - but we'll get there!
I made a proposition for a simplified version with smoother profile - basically a pre engraving version. This is moreso a quick proposition for the lining style but I did make a few adjustments.I'm just afraid of doing it too fine
Hmmm... I like the straight line method more than I thought I would! I've seen old American industrial companies use similar straight-line engraving methods on letterheads back before they all closed down and got shipped to China. Maybe a more complex curvy windy engraving method isn't needed, this straight method does seem to fit the "feel" of the scene?Second attmept at engraving
Suggestions?
Once Jersh issues an opinion on your pieces perhaps it'd be worthwhile to have a little informal open invite showing where people submit their own versions based on that work? I've been working on something of my own based on your work but would like to see what he thinks about the straight-line technique. I will try a curve line method just to have more options if he is ambivalent on it.did 2 versions
darker one and 50% less shadow
which one?
edit done with the rock