Saturday, December 23, 2017

And now... a fire dragon

After doing the water dragon (see here), I attempted a more conventional kind of giant lizard - the fire-breathing kind, also from Kerby Rosanes' Mythomorphia book.

These two dragons are on facing pages in the book, likely meant by Rosanes to be tackled together. I did so because it was an exercise in rendering water, and then fire. Two very basic elements in nature.

Bottomline: I'm not good in doing backgrounds. 
This one, like some of my other works, is a disappointment. 
There would be a lot of yellows, oranges and reds for the flames in this picture, so I went with blue for the dragon for a nice complementary color scheme, although I had my doubts that fire-breathing dragons would be blue. (But since dragons are mythical, who's to say, right?) 

I turned to the scumbling technique for the dragon's skin, using a fairly light touch and various shades of blue, going with a lighter shade where the scales catch the light. (See here for useful pencil techniques.) 

To do the fire, I used a similar technique, going with pale yellows generally in the centre of each flame, where it would be white hot, and grading to increasingly darker oranges towards the edges. Tuscan red went into the recessed "folds" of each plume of fire. 

As with the water dragon, whose fore limbs are towers of water, there is no real clear line where the dragon's scales end and tongues of fire begin here - or at least, that's how I see it. I checked other color pencil enthusiasts' work on this dragon online, and saw that most of them had colored the two large plumes of fire by the side of the dragon in the color of the dragon's skin. The way I did it, however, depicts the flames as part of the dragon itself. This dragon is the fire!

No matter, I suppose. This work is continuing to draw "likes" in my Instagram feed. 

After I was done with the reptile, I moved on to the rocky outcrop, using three shades of French grey for lit and shadowed areas. The emerald comb and card were done quickly, without fuss.

... and then, I should have stopped right there and called this piece DONE, and left the background white, like with the water dragon. 

As has so often happened when I am faced with a large expanse of background after having worked on the subject, I get impatient to be done. 

I couldn't even decide for a number of days what kind of sky I wanted, and sort of decided on a sunset palette, glowing peach around the dragon, and grading to pink and then lavender. And that's what didn't turn out so well! I tried the scumbling method so that the gradations wouldn't show, but it didn't work so well, despite using my blender pencil and a piece of tissue paper to smooth out the pencil marks in the bits when i got impatient. 

I am measuring myself from the benchmark set by Matthew Vaughn (@manlycoloring on Instagram). This is definitely something I need to work on. 

  




Monday, December 11, 2017

A water dragon



I'm on year-end vacation now, so I'll have more time for this!

Today, I completed this picture of a water dragon from Kerby Rosanes' Mythomorphia coloring book.

I picked purple, my favourite color, for the critter, but the challenge for this piece lay in rendering the water - how to depict transparency. I'm not too satisfied with this one. 

I used my Prismacolor powder blue and pale sage as the base color and then used a deeper blue and deeper green for the darker areas, and white and pale yellow for the parts where light is shooting through the crest of the wave.










Tuesday, December 05, 2017

A disappointing result

Finished coloring in Kerby Rosanes' Mythomorphia ghoul yesterday, a month and then some after Halloween, and I don't like what I see.



The blood moon and the glow it would have thrown on the dark sky aren't well done, and the pencil lines are too obvious, even after blending with a piece of tissue paper and with my blender in some parts. 

I had done the ghoul, his pet wolf-dog and their little hill of skulls first, and, as always, the blank background stared back at me, melting away much of my patience. I think I was in too much of a hurry to finish it, after the subjects in the foreground had sat there half finished for a couple of weeks. It was a busy period at home and at work.

The ghoul: I settled easily on making him a shade of dull green, since he's "undead". Again, Rosanes' shadow shading helped me greatly in where to go with a deeper green or even French grey to denote shadows.

The wolf dog: I wanted it to be a dark, dark grey, nearly black, so that the red/vermillion eyes would pop.

The tree: This took a while, with all the gnarliness in deep brown to offset the paler brown of the trunk. I had wanted to make the lone apple on the branch red, but since I already gave Mr Ghoul a scarlet loin cloth, I didn't want to repeat the color. So this became a granny smith tree!

The roots, among which sat all those skulls, took a while, and I was running out of patience, because doing it pretty much restricted my palette to browns, greys and black. The skulls were done easily enough.

Then... the background, my nemesis. With ghouls being creatures of the night, it had to be a night sky, and the inspiration came to me to draw in a blood moon. With its deep red hue, such a moon would add to the spookiness of the scene. I looked up the Internet for pictures of blood moons for inspiration, and built my palette from there. I layered several reds, oranges and deep greys, and left the lower right quadrant a paler yellow for some variation. I had to tone down the moon with a deep grey overall, because it looked too red to be believable.

It still looked all right at this stage. Things went south only when I attempted the sky, especially the part around the moon.  For the sky to the right of the picture, I applied three shades of deep blue - the ultramarine, indanthrone, dioxazine purple - then deepened the top of the picture with 90% cool grey to darken it.

I put a layer of orange round the edges of the moon, and then introduced lilac, blending the edges to try to get the gradation smooth. The plan had been to make the lilac morph into blue through shading to join up with the rest of the sky, but, as you can see, the blending didn't go according to plan and just looks Plain Wrong. Because the colors at this point seemed too bright, I brought in my deep grey again to mute it down, but that too, didn't go well.

The rim lighting: The trusty white gel pen came in useful here for the silvery threads of bright white where the ghoul, wolf-dog and tree catch the moonlight.

Maybe I should have done a regular yellow moon. Might have been less demanding and not required so many colors.