That looks pretty damn solid to me! Math in art can be incredibly rewarding when used correctly. Perspective scares me too since I tend to do it freehand and it's not my strongest skill at all. However, I've developed an appreciation for it and want to it more often since I'm writing a script for a comic based around life.Here's a thing I started back on Sunday and finished up yesterday:
Have I ever told you guys that I hate drawing environments? Cause I really, really hate it. It's nothing but pure math. Put that figure there in the middle to help keep my sanity lol
edit: Unfortunately I can't scan it because it's a 11x14 image and my scanner only does 8x10 >.>
For the past several months, I've had Perspective for Comic Book Artists sitting underneath my desk on top of a stack of brand new comic paper. We get spoiled by illustration programs that wave away all the tedious measuring work away so it's nice to sit down and do it traditionally.
That said, environments are great! I read an interview with Michael Cho on CBR a few months ago since he was promoting Shoplifter (great, short read by the way with a simple color scheme). In that interview, he mentioned that drawing environments intimidated him as a kid IIRC so as an adult, he spent several months drawing environments to get a better understanding of them and developed an appreciation for it.
Any way, the moral of the story is do more of the stuff that scares you/is outside your comfort zone to become more rounded and get feedback on it to improve. Who knows? You might end up liking drawing environments moreso than characters. I clearly don't take my own advice. xD
@AdanVC , welcome! Those look pretty damn solid! It has some really nice varieties of line weights going on. I can learn a thing or two about inking techniques to add to the arsenal. What kind of pens are you using?