Today begins our first Inktober! We never made drawings in this style, but we hope to improve a lot, have fun together, and give you some emotions. The main theme will be the Warcraft's universe, one of our greatest passions.This is N'Zoth, one of the Old Gods. Do you think he will spray some ink? xP
Inktober day 5: "Victory for the Forsaken!" Sylvanas Windrunner , could not miss the party :P
dailysketch 13/365 Today my dad was a bit sad. A few days ago he said that he likes this kind of animal called Genetta, so I sketched one to cheer him up ;)
Inktober day 27: She is Lady Prestor, the human form of Onyxia, Deathwing's daughter. Hope you like!
A sketch made on iPad Air with Pencil by 53 and Procreate, a fantasy portrait of an elf. Hope you like anyway :)
dailydrawing 8/365 Some days I would like to be able to fly high in the sky, feeling the wind on my skin and reach faraway places, to give me time to think quietly, without the caos of the World.
Another Art Commission done! A Night Elf Mage from Warcraft!
Don’t forget we have a special discount on commissions just for this month ;) Feel free to contact us!
#Inktober day 28: Ragnaros the Firelord, master of all fire elementals!
Welcome back to another art tutorial! We're so glad to see that last time lot of you found interest in what we wrote. You gave us an incredible support and we hope to don't disappoint you with our nexts art tips! So, let's talk about tools you need to get started! This chapter may be long, so we divide this in two parts.
INTRODUCTION AND TRADITIONAL ART
1) Traditional or Digital?
We're going to talk more deeply about this soon... for now we just had to say: this two methods may seems different, but at the end there's not much difference. It's all about comfort, style, money in some case, and personal preferences.
I'll explain this in the image below:
Seen? Not much difference at all ;)
What we can say shortly is that working traditionally may cost less (not at professional level, because supplies cost a lot and also not last long) , while digital make some process much faster and the CRTL+Z function is a pure divine blessing.
The center of the discussion is: Traditional and Digital are not enemies, who use to be traditional is not better than who use digital and viceversa, and you not need to learn one rather then the other one first. You will get lot of satisfacion from both, you just had to choose the right tools for you! Each have some exclusive feature and the best part is that you can mix them together creating some unique masterpieces.
But we had to say this: in this modern world being a Digital Artist have a lot of more benefits in terms of time, reproducibility and effectiveness than traditional art.
Every artistic current is the daughter of his time and it is nice to live the present, because one day there will be no more and we'll understand his preciousness too late. So, don't reject something just for principle, I know that what is new can be scary.
2) Sketch'n'painting!
There's a lot of things that usually nobody say, and this is an unpopular one of those: Drawing is a thing. Painting is another.
To be a successful artist or at least to enjoy what you're doing, you don't need to know both, but of course I suggest to have a complete perspective for make art. So, the thing is, make practice in drawing, make a lot of sketches, focus on the shapes, on your lines, but also make some exercise making volumes with colors, modeling with light and shadow, express with color blends. My advice is to make some practice in sketching starting from simple things, for example your smarthphone, some fruits, a pencil... whatever you want. At the beginning keep focus on the silhouette, then try to split the zones with lots of shadow with the ones with lights. At this point you will have already a good awareness for drawing something. To make practice with painting, try to trace an image or a photo placing a sheet of paper on a light source if you're working traditional, or maybe use an image on a different layer in digital. Then focus on the shadows and light contrast, on the colors and reflections.
Every teacher will say that you need to learn drawing before painting... but at the beginning, only focus on some black lines may be frustrating and alienate someone to continue, but if you learn how to sketch and at the same time you learn how the color works, you will see how much you can do and this may be a good motivation to don't give up. Believe me, it works!
3) What do I need for Drawing Traditionally?
The market is full of choice, so you can be guided by your personal tastes, but basically you may know that with better materials generally come better results. At the beginning you don't need a 10$ piece of paper just for sketching, but keep in mind that don't be severe with yourself. If many artists around here make beautiful works, it's not because they are gods, but because they have done so much practice, they know their tools well and have the right materials. Time to time ;)
We'll talk more about traditional tools in the future, for now here's a quick start guide for the techniques I used the most.
TRADITIONAL DRAWING Essential things are:
- A sketchbook (rough paper for artistic stuff, depends on your media) you can choose a classic white paper or a midtone (better for make highlight with white pencil). If you want something super portable to take everywhere, some hardcover little sketchbook should fits for you, but when you're at home or comfortably sit on a desk or table I suggest a simple album of sheets or with a spiral binding. Dimensions may be your personal choice, but with an A4 you will have more supporting surface and this could translate in much more freedom while drawing. About the thickness, is better something around 90g/m , with some thinner paper you may incur in breakages, and problems with color saturation. Put simply, you could make a mess full of stains. Cool grunge stuff? I don't think so.
- Graphite Pencil (for the beginning, I suggest an HB for standard lines, a 2B for shadows and 2H for soft lines) and eventually a Penknife (it's important to have the tip not consumed too much). H stay for Hardness, wich means you will have clear lines, basically grey, and the overall feeling is of an hard stretch. You should use it to set the lines at the beginning of the drawing or to create clean strokes. B stay for Blackness, wich means you will have dark lines, thick, shaded. It's ideal for create nuances, thicken the edges, and make shadows. HB unites both. It's a standard pencil, useful in many situations.
Alternative: a
technical pencil
is also a great choice , you have the same kind of tips, same tips, and you not need a Penknife, It will be easier to keep the same trait. And be careful, the tip can easily break, but it's nothing.
- Eraser - everyone make mistake, and from that we will learn a lot. Also the best artists out there made mistake, but what is important is to recognise this errors and resolve it fast. A little at a time, you will learn to make a drawing fast without make lots of mistake, but for now, don't be afraid to erase what's wrong. So, nobody will see that :P And for more complex drawings:
- Smudge - some of you may have use fingers in the childhood to color some drawing with pencil powder, and also you remember some good shades from it, right? Smudge is basically this principle, a compressed cardboard pencil wich serves to blend the graphite. And... don't get me wrong, it's absolutely much more better than fingers, it gives much control and complessity to lights and shadows. You will be amazed!
- Charcoal and Chalk - for less clean drawing but with beatiful shades and effect like the old masters, this may be the right choice for you. Usually they are so dirty, and I suggest to use a larger drawing surface for that. They're the equivalent of a very soft pencil with a very large tip.
- Ink - A classic old technique, you can take ink from a nib or use brushes to create strong and defined lines.
For COLORING:
- Coloured pencils - There's too much choice, really. What I can tell you, of course, is that more colors you have, better the results will be. Be careful to not saturate the paper with color, use a rough paper to give a good texture and you will get some great work.
- Markers - Many of you who are interested in manga, comics or design will surely know this technique. It's a very expensive tool, but also very cool. Generally they are alcohol based colors with a felt tip that allow you to color quickly and with really beautiful shades. To get good results, many, many colors are needed, and I also recommend a special paper for alcohol colors, because they really stain a lot. It also stink a little.
TRADITIONAL PAINTING
There's so much cool techniques out there, and you really have spoilt for choice. For now, the ones I suggest are Acrylics and Watercolors:
- Acrylics (more flexible than oils) - The type of standard painting that dry quickly compared to oil paintings and can be diluted with other mediums and can be used over many different supports, such paper, wood, canvas, metal. They require careful cleaning because when they dry up ... problems comes. For Acrilics you need:
- A Canvas or a thick paper - even if you can paint on a lot of rigid supports, these are the most common and versatile methods. Various sizes, depending on the type of work you want to do and even if you want to create something transportable rather than a huge panel.
- Selection of Brushes - (I suggest synthetics one) Every brush have is own effect, so choose that according to your preferences. At the beginning, a round-tipped and a flat brush can be enough.
- Colors - you can start with just the basic color (yellow, red, blue, white, black) but a ready made pigment will ever be more brillant. You will find them in jars or tubes, on different sizes. It depends on how much you have to paint, and always close everything well to not make them dry.
Watercolors ( dry, liquid, guache or ecoline) - is a very old techniques, one of the most loved of all time. It allows you to quickly color sketches, create unique effects, and the fact that is not heavy allows you to work with the background of the paper, acting by levels. It's perfect for sketching, illustrations, comics or travel, usually the sets are sold in small boxes not bigger than a smarthphone. For Watercolors you need: - Watercolor paper (basically sheets of cotton or tick paper, since water is used, the paper tend to deform a lot. An advice is also to stop the edges with a scotch tape.
- Brushes (basically fine brushes, always synthetic) you don't need expensive brushes because they tend to ruin itself very little over time. Generally you will need small and pointed brushes, no special shapes are needed for now.
- Colors - The watercolors comes in various forms, in godet, in tubes, or in the form of inks or bottles of concentrated color (usually called Ecoline) Just try and choose your favorite. In general tubes it's called Gouache and it is an opaque painting compared to the transparency of the classic watercolor in Godet. However, Those already liquids are very bright.
- Black liner or ink - If you want to give clear contours to the shapes or make shadows. There are special pens with different tips, and even pens with the tip similar to a brush. Otherwise you can think of a more classical solution with a nib dipped into liquid ink.
- White Pen - to add some light strokes. Purists would say that white is obtained only with the non-color of the sheet. In my opinion, with a white pen the effect is more cool. Always depends on what you have to do, be creative!
- Some Water in a Jar - It's important to wash your brushes and of course knead the colors. You don't need specific materials, some jars of marmalade or homogenized food for childrens are a good choice.
My favourite pick is drawing with black pencils and ink, and put some colors on with watercolors, because it create some cool effects, dries quickly, and it's easy to carry around and combined with Digital Media create some great stuffs. Try to believe!
We will talk again about all of this. I should need an entire book to explain everything we have to say, but until we have not the funds to support a similar production... meh. But of course if you're interested in seeing a future for this project, just a Like, a Reblog, a sharing on your socials may help a lot! :D
Next time's episode: Digital Art Tools!
#BattleForAzeroth is full of beautiful characters and places, we really fell in love with it. Here’s a little tribute made with iPad, a Blood Troll from Nazmir. Hope you like! #Warcraft
We finally found the time to finish this painting, after a couple of week. Here's our portrait of a Draenei Lightforge from Warcraft ! Hope you like it!
For some expenses we stopped playing WoW from December, we miss it a lot... but at least we can draw some characters ;P
... (T.T)
We are Stefano and Luna, a couple of Artists, Daydreamers and Fantasy Adventurers!
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