Hey kids!
So recently I decided to try something different and submit an entry into Fantasy Earth Zero’s “Create a Character” contest. Of course, I love costume design, and fantasy especially is a genre that could use some shaking up; so I decided to create a minimalistic but edgy sorcerer.
Check it out at my DeviantArt Account!
Here’s a little bit of my process;
First off, I’ll usually start with some thumbnail sketches to help me test out the energy of different poses, themes, etc… Once I have a few that I like, I’ll usually move on to fleshing them out at a larger size, to see how well the energy of the original thumbnail communicates at full size.
Once I’ve chosen something I like, I’ll start sketching it out at about 10×14. For me, going smaller than that loses to much detail, and any larger and– let’s be honest– I wouldn’t have enough room in my already massive purse to carry this stuff around!
Once the pencil’s are done, it’s time for inks. When I was first starting out, I would do my inks right over the original sketch, but as I gained more experience, I realized that doing this put the original sketch at risk if the inks didn’t go well, and more importantly, the inks never moved very well over the lead or the indents the lead left in paper. This might sound nitpicky, but what seems minor at first will be quite literally blown out of proportion once it’s been scanned.
Anyway, when it comes to inks I have two approaches; in the first, I’ll take a piece of vellum (a semi-transparent paper ideal for tracing) and lay that over the sketch so I can retrace it cleanly in ink. In the second approach, I’ll lay the sketch and a clean sheet of bristol (a thick white paper with a smooth surface that allows for smoother inking) onto a lightbox. If you don’t know what a light box is, it’s a box about the size of a lap desk that emits light so that anything placed on top becomes semi-transparent; just like holding a drawing up against a window during the day. With the lightbox, tracing the original sketch onto a fresh piece of paper is as easy as if I was using the vellum I mentioned before. A lightbox is a nice investment no matter what type of artist you are. Or, if you’re a DIY freak like me, you can check out some tutorials on how to make your own lightbox.
Eventually when I have a nice, crisply inked drawing, I’ll scan it into Adobe Photoshop. When scanning, I prefer to avoid using the scanner’s build in white/black corrections in favor of “cleaning” the artwork myself. First, I remove all obvious debris, dust and stray ink in the drawing by simply using the rectangle tool in white and blocking in some areas very quickly. After that, I whip out my wacom tablet and start smoothing out some of the roughest parts of the ink work with a white brush just to keep all my details tidy. When I feel the sketch is as clean as it can get by hand, I’ll convert it to grayscale and start adjusting the levels (under Image>Mode>Levels) to make the whites as white as possible and the blacks as black as possible.
Once that’s done, I export the image to Adobe Illustrator where I run a “Live Trace” over it; this is an engine (originally a part of Adobe’s now defunct Streamline) that creates a clean, impossibly crisp vector lineart. On an aside, seeing the fresh new vector lineart feels as satisfying as a grabbing fresh, hot laundry from the dryer. <3
Aaanyway, once I’ve got the new vector lineart that will be the base of the final artwork, I’ll take it into a program like Portal Graphic’s openCanvas or more recently, Corel’s Painter, and start coloring my lineart… but that’s a WHOLE other walk through!
If you guys have found this information helpful at all, let me know! I’d be happy to go into more detail about tools and techniques with screenshots if you’re curious.
Happy weekending~!