~2 hours! I enjoy how these look so I'll probably be making a lot more. >_>
yesterday's sketch pencil, colored pencil, ink n stuff
![]()
I've started doing little environment speedpaints, mostly to mess around with colors.
Those are really great!
When you say speedpaint, how much time are you talking about?
Thank you!I haven't been strictly timing, but around 2-3 hours each (using podcast episodes listened as my metric, heh).
couple from the last few days
Haha, I'm kind of relieved to hear that. I was scared you were going to be some wizard who could do those in half an hour or so.
And yeah, that's usually what I do too when I'm illustrating listen to a podcast or catch up on TV.
I did this one in about an hour. It's modeled off my boyfriend, although he's not actually a DJ, but he is addicted to energy drinks.
![]()
This one took about three hours. I kept tweaking everything because I wasn't happy with it, but I am now.
![]()
Eep! I love it. (I'm wearing one of my several Harley Quinn shirts right now)
Mik, CB and Lilith, your stuff is amazing. Keep it up!
I've started doing little environment speedpaints, mostly to mess around with colors.
Does anyone have any advice on getting comissions?
I've been advertising on deviantart and facebook, but haven't gotten anything.
Looking among my friends (of which many do art) , you gotta go hard EVERYWHERE, DA and facebook are okay but get an account setup at newgrounds , tumblr , twitter and then get artist alley tables at local conventions , have business cards.
Try to make friends among the local art/comic community (if you live in a city , there will be one , it's just a matter of seeking them out) and cross promote.
There's also going to be a disconnect between what people will pay and what you think your worth , you have to find a middle ground. If you think you're art is worth 25$ an hour and it takes you 2 hours to draw something , you might find out that potential customers think that drawing is only worth 20 bucks.
Also, and this is the only bad advice - I've seen many people , especially on Deviant art and tumblr , make pretty good money by catering to specific crowds. Quality is much less important with these people as most are just happy to get a drawing of their ... thing. But going down that road leads to darkness depending on just how far askew your personal tastes are with the requests you get.
There's also a fair bit of luck involved here, simply posting art to tumblr and deviant art gets it out there and hopefully - someone makes something you drew at least a little bit popular which pulls in a bigger audience and eventually that can lead to someone willing to pay for a commission. When you do get that commission , do NOT bite off more than you can chew , give a reasonable timeframe and don't agree to do something that makes you uncomfortable for any reason. Also have a short written contract ready , you don't want to have to make 10 drawings for someone if they aren't happy with the first 1.
Thanks! And yep, all Photoshop.Incredible work dude. Photoshop?
Thanks! And yep, all Photoshop.
Unfortunately we can't see your drawing.Try hosting your images on imgur or min.us or even start an art blog, it's always a good way to track progress.
sketches of the week
![]()
![]()
![]()
Thanks, I appreciate it and dutifully noted! It's nice get that feedback after working on the art but not sharing all that often.I really enjoy your work Jipan. There are so many great renderers and figure drawing/character artists. You have a natural style that is really engaging to my eye. Keep it up!
As I always say, anyone can learn to draw regardless of skill level; I didn't go to art school (went to a state college) but I'm learning new techniques. No shame in just drawing for yourself initially or attending a few meet up groups where people draw. It's all lines, references, and geometry in the end of the day. Everyone started out rusty.Just wanted to say you guys are all amazing. I can (barely) draw stick figures, I don't even know where to begin on the amazing stuff you guys do.
I've been wanting to get into drawing for a while. After doing some research, I decided to pick up this book. I'm only stumped on what edition to get... I thought it'd be best to just pick up the latest edition, but then I started hearing complaints about it and recommendations to pick up earlier versions instead. Anyone familiar with the different editions who could give me a recommendation?
Around 10 - 15 min per page.