Almighty Zeus
Friday, April 25, 2008
Labels: Color Studies / Covers / Digital Color / Penciled / Photoshop / Technique
Here's the cover to The Iliad #8 that I showed on Monday, but the actual painting doesn't look like this. I gave him dark brown hair in the real version, but my editors wanted the top god to look a little older. So I simply printed out the head on matte photo paper and repainted the silver hair on top of that. I scanned it in and stitched it all back together again in Photoshop. Easy!
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This is the actual painting on 11" x 17" bristol board.
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I went through a little phase a couple weeks ago where I started using charcoal again. I needed something looser for my bigger images (like covers) because I don't like my technical pencil mark-making at that large a scale. The phase didn't last, however — it's just not tight enough for what I need. Since then, I've picked up my lead holder once again, which seems to be doing the trick.
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This is my typical digital color study. Most of the information is there, just less refined. As usual, I like this stage better.
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And I've been doing this for almost every color study now. I start with a grayscale painting where I get almost everything figured out compositionally. Then, I come back with a brush set to "color" mode, allowing me to change the hue and saturation without altering the brightness. I really got a handle on this technique when coloring my black and white Hulk paintings. Now, however, it's just a great way to divide and conquer my image-making problems.
In Mythos: Cap news, I'm on page 15! I'll be painting D-Day all day today.
Wonderful process, you seem to have nailed it. I dig the charcoal drawing - even though it doesn't work as a step in your process, it still makes for a beautiful study.
ReplyDeleteI like seeing the process. Thanks for posting.
ReplyDeleteI like the brown haired Zeus painting better.
ReplyDelete:) He was the youngest of Kronos' children and so shouldn't have grey hair!
Thanks, guys! My editor said he is prematurely gray.
ReplyDelete