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Monday, December 17, 2012

Old-fashioned


1680s pompadour dress with a fontage (the thing on top of her head)


Colonial/Georgian style dress

Barbara Villiers, copied from this painting by Sir Peter Lely.
She was a (the first?) mistress of Charles II.
I like post-restoration dresses in England. I like just thinking about it: in the decade of the 1650s under Cromwell, dress was controlled by Puritans and "morality police"; but then when the king returned to the throne in 1660, BAM! boobs are back! 


That's it for now! Happy drawings!



Thursday, December 13, 2012

"Virtue Rewarded"

I'm still enjoying my new found inking tool in Adobe Illustrator! I did a drawing today of Pamela from Samuel Richardson's "Virtue Rewarded". Ooooo, robe `a la polonaise! So much want...

Started with a pencil sketch; then inked it in Illustrator; then went crazy with it in Photoshop!





 "Virtue Rewarded", written in 1740, definitely does not speak through the centuries.... very chauvinist and preachy - not to mention that Pamela has a serious case of Stockholm Syndrome. Here's the full text, and the Wiki page.

I almost made it to the end of the book, but the last 25% was... sickening. Non-stop adulation and swooning, and even after she marries Mr. B (the guy who locked her up and tried to rape her repeatedly), she refuses to stop calling him "Master" (because she likes the sound of it). There's a beautiful story of how, when the novel was first published, a whole village was so enraptured with the story that they would gather at their blacksmith's to hear it read out loud. After hearing about that, I was really interested in reading it... but there have been too many cultural changes since 1740 for me to relate at all with the characters... plus, there were too many parts where I couldn't decide if I wanted to laugh at Pamela or cry for her.

About the illustration: to be honest, it's far more colorful than how I envision the story in my head (my mental movie is full of blue and sepia), but I kinda like the irony of a colorful, modern-looking illustration for a gloomy, incredibly-old-fashioned story XD


Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Video Game Challenge


(right click and select "view image" for zoomed in view)

This was a fun thing to do. There's a DA group called "Design-a-Character" that gives bi-weekly challenges for things to draw, and the above image was for the most current challenge.

I've never designed a video game character, or have never even drawn a video game character, so this was definitely an experiment for me. Instead of making up my own video game, I went with WoW, and designed a new species - Naga Elf :D I completely neglected to give her any sort of gear or weapon, but it's always fun drawing a svelte female form ^_^ That goofy thing in the lower right corner is the second part of the challenge, in honor of the new movie "Wreck-It Ralph" (awesome awesome movie!!): to show what the video game character would look like in a 70s-80s arcade game. Part of the personal challenge was to stop laughing every time I looked at it...

In continuing with my self-teaching, I've now broached the barrier of learning how to ink my lines using Adobe Illustrator! I'm also continuing to hone and, indeed, just find what my style is. I love the human figure, and drawing women in particular, and I can't seem to separate myself from realism. I adore cartoony styles, though, and my admiration continually pulls me away from my comfort zones. This is where I'd love actual coaching like I'd get from a class - self-teaching myself how to develop my style is difficult! But how I'm progressing has been very very rewarding, and also free :)

I've been using another Deke McClelland book to teach myself Adobe Illustrator: "Adobe Illustrator CS5 One-on-One". Very nice book! I also really like this youtube video that shows a super easy way to ink things on Illustrator, but you still need some knowledge of how Illustrator works in order to learn from that video.

Happy drawings!