Tag super hero

new art today – “Super Oops”

As I had hoped, I have the new piece scanned and ready on the website here.

Super Oops

work progress – blocking in the skin

Yesterday I started the day painting on the textured gesso for the skin areas, then worked on the booth using colored pencils until the gesso could dry completely. Late in the day I got to start on the skin, first with colored pencils for tone and contouring, then blended in with oil pastels…
super03

I was able to get through the detailing today, so I should have the completed piece up later tonight I hope.

rough start on a new piece

I had this super hero idea that I shot with model Kym a couple months ago, and thought it was time to get to it. It took a little work to make the right pose I wanted (I rarely know what I want at the time of the shoot, so we just free form a set and hope it works; it’s not until I start actually creating the image that I see what is best), but I managed to figure it out. Then I had to design the outfit. She wore a few reference items to help with the form and flow, so it wasn’t too hard to transform that into what I wanted. Then I had to find/build a prop for the background. All this was completed this past weekend (Saturday). I had it drawn on a board Sunday, and began work on it, airbrushing the background, then beginning the outfit. With it being so smooth and simplistic, I figured airbrushing the cape would be best the method for it. No problems there. Then I had the gloves, skirt and boots (all red) to contend with. I don’t often plan ahead for handling areas of a piece, so when I came to this I figured I’d just paint them with acrylics. Well, since the tubes don’t say anything about transparency, I didn’t anticipate the red not to be opaque. Two coats in and I could still see the board beneath, brush strokes showing throughout. Either I paint a half dozen coats, or I go to the airbrush (since the cape looked so good). Fine, but this meant reapplying the masking, which shouldn’t have been a problem. Well, since the cape areas had no paint on their masking, they were clear, and consequently, I couldn’t tell that I had missed a piece. it wasn’t until I completed the airbrushing of the red areas and removed the masking that I noticed half the cape was now sprayed with red (and not evenly, so no chance of just calling the cape purple and airbrush the other half). Frustrated, I threw the board away.
So, with a couple days lost, I began again yesterday, hoping to learn from the previous days’ mistakes and do this one right. To start, here’s the drawing…
super01
model – Kym

As noted above, I airbrushed the background. Since it would be a very light coating, I didn’t bother with any masking at this point. The bottom was covered in a light gray, purposely spattered to give it a sidewalk texture (needs more, which I’ll add later); for the top I used a light blue turquoise. Once dry, I masked the entire piece, then removed the cape areas and airbrushed them with a deep blue. With that completely dry (wouldn’t want any of it to be pulled up later) I returned all the masking to the cape areas, then removed the red areas (gloves, skirt, boots). I airbrushed them in bright to deep reds. I then removed all the masking and reviewed those areas. the red got a little dark, so I used colored pencils to brighten them a bit, as well as adding details (the white highlights were painted with acrylic).
Next, I painted the face and hair with gouache. I also painted the gold pieces of the outfit (belt, cape cord). Then came the painfully slow and boring chore of painting the phone booth. I think I cane count on one hand how many straight-edged objects I’ve ever had in my paintings, and this is why; it’s just tedious. Section by section I went along, most being flat blocks of color, but a few had a bit of gradation from tint to shade. These acrylics are designed to be re-wettable for a while, but become permanent later. Well, seems that timing is longer than I thought, as I had added a second layer to a few areas hours later, and yet the paint pulled up from the board. I know I’ll be using colored pencils on the booth later anyway, so I’ll use them to make these areas a better texture then.
So, here’s the painted phase complete (still needs the textured gesso on the skin yet); the red paint casts a sheen from the camera’s flash, so they don’t look right, but the scanner will get it right in the end…
super02

More paint, then completing – “Shoot From the Hip”

Yesterday I finished up the the paint work. I painted the boots using various gray gouaches, blending them to a base medium tone. Once dry, I added black details, blending dark grays into the mid-tones, and finally adding white highlights. I then painted the red laces (also in the sleeves) and the gray eyelets (with white highlights). To complete the painting step, I coated the skin areas with the textured gesso. I haven’t tested how well this paper will take the oil pastels on its own, so I’ll stick with the gesso just to play it safe. I decided to leave the tiny triangle shapes of the hips uncoated, that way I can test the paper without ruining the whole piece (at worst, I scrape the area and fix it)…
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Later in the day, I blocked in the skin areas with colored pencils and oil pastels. Since there isn’t all the much, it went quickly, and I was able to start in on the details that evening. The tiny test areas worked okay without the gesso, although I think the gesso still helps.
I completed the details this morning, and have it up on the site now here.

Shoot From the Hip

New artwork started

Working with multiple mediums has its advantages, but also many challenges. My greatest one is finding paper textures that work well with all of the mediums. I’ve been working mostly with ‘hot press’ because it doesn’t have much of any texture, so airbrush, pencils and paint all look nice and smooth. The trouble is the oil pastels go on too thin (transparent), so I’ve always had to use a textured gesso in those areas (typically just the skin).
I recently picked up a few varieties of different papers to try out. For this new piece, I’m using a cold press illustration board from Arches. The concept for this piece is another comic book inspired idea. A sexy woman in tight black wardrobe, holding a pistol…
Black01
model – Gia

I masked out the image, then began airbrushing the background. First I mixed a light green/turquoise acrylic and covered the entire board. Next, I mixed a darker version (no green, just turquoise, blue and a bit of black) and worked around the edges inward, avoiding the star pattern as I went along. It wasn’t as dark as I had wanted, so I mixed some more black and ultramarine into it and again worked inward…
Black02
The paper texture has begun to show, but it’s not bothering me.

Next, I spent a couple days painting, since only a small amount of the image will be skin. I painted the face first, using gouache, then the hair with a mix of gouache and watercolors, building up layers of color. I painted the pistol and the leg-strapped holster with various dark grays, adding some black and white for shadows and highlights.
This paper holds water nicely, giving me some time to actually spread and blend the paint before it embeds itself, causing edging. This allowed me to cover the outfit in a smooth gradient from light gray to dark blue-black. Still, it didn’t have quite the look I wanted, so I re applied the masking around those areas, then used the airbrush to finesse the look. White highlights complete the outfit…
Black03

New art completed – “Stars and Stripes”

I had a great shoot yesterday with model Kneely. It threw off my timing of completing the current piece, but I did get it done today. I used colored pencils and oil pastels on the face (except around the eyes and ear), torso and legs. Then I used gouache for the rest of the skin areas, followed by some pencil work for added details.
It now complete, scanned and ready in the store here.

Stars and Stripes

work progress – paint just about done

This piece is moving along very smooth and easy, not certain why. Today I continued the paint work, using acrylics to color in the white and red stripes on the sleeves. The white was actually a mix of gray, white and blue. Once the details were in, I didn’t feel it was worth creating masks for them both to airbrush the ‘sparkles’ as I had done on the blue areas, so I used metallic oil pastels on them, rubbing them in with tortillions. It doesn’t get those tiny sparkles, but will catch the light in its own way, so it works.
Next, I painted the face and hair using gouache. The area around the eyes is too small to bother with oil pastels later, so I will be painting them. The ear and possibly hands will also be paint this time. I’ll wait until the pastels are in so I can match the color better. Then I painted the boots, also with gouache.
To finish the paint work, I coated the skin areas with the textured gesso so they’ll be ready for pencils and pastels tomorrow…
america04

starting a new piece

With Comic-Con just a few months away, I’m starting to think about comic book characters again. The new Iron Man movie is also fueling this creativity. Although this new design isn’t inspired by that movie, hopefully it’ll seem a bit familiar to most.
Here it is drawn on the board, ready to begin…
america01
model – Gia

I quickly masked up the image and began my airbrushing of the background. To start, I mixed a very light yellow acrylic, covering the top portion of the entire board. Then I mixed in more yellow and some vermilion, and covered just about the same area, but grading lighter toward the upper right corner (the Sun is just past the edge of the board). Next, I mixed a light gray-blue acrylic, covering the remainder of the board. After that, I went back to the orange, mixing in some burnt sienna and a hint of black, painting the horizon and downward, as well as a bit on the left edge of the sky. Finally, I mixed just burnt sienna and black to paint the shadow beneath her boots, and the buildings along the skyline (some freehand, some holding a cardboard cutout of the buildings). I lightly used this mix also for the streaks of clouds in the sky…
america02

With the background complete, I began painting the subject. I chose to use the airbrush again for the blue in her outfit, which covers her chest, neck, part of her face, and hips. I masked around these areas, then mixed a medium blue acrylic, covering the areas evenly. Then I mixed in some ultramarine with a hint of black, building up the dark areas. I added a bit more black and hit the darkest areas next. I mixed the original blue with white, building up the brighter areas. Once dry, I used colored pencils to add detail, as well as deepen the color. Finally, I airbrushed a blue-green ‘sparkle’ acrylic over the whole area…
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