Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Illustration Friday: Change



This was a sample done for a possible puzzle. I wasn't sure how the whole engineering of it would work, but somehow you'd be able to change out pieces and change the doll's hair or clothes or whatever. Ended up the budget was cut, and therefore no project... This is kind of old, but I just double-checked and realized I'd never posted it here or at my regular site, so here 'tis.

Uh... let's see... technical specs: scanned pencil drawing, colored in Photoshop. Gotta love the Photoshop.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Ahoy Ye Scurvy Thieves!



Arggggggggh... Just in case you forgot, a friendly reminder that today is International Talk Like A Pirate Day!

I gots no piratey drarwin's to be showin' ye today, but I've got a bit o' Treasure to share. (From a project I did this summer - above is just a little piece of the whole treasure chest.)

Fair winds me buckos!
-Red Mary Bonney

Friday, September 15, 2006

tiki tiki



Finished these up this morning. Spent way too much time on them. Lots of trial and error trying to figure out the style and process. Finally bagged all the imported lines from Flash, and did everything by hand in Photoshop. Sore cramped hand by the end of doing all those black and yellow lines!

Monday, September 11, 2006

Doctor Doodle



Just a random little doodle I liked, so decided to throw some color on it. Sketch and color done in photoshop, just using the standard round brushes.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Particles are your friend



To rid this blog of the bad aftertaste of the bitter disappointment, I think I'll kick off the weekend with some happy fireworks. This was a fun little project I did earlier this week. Quick background painted in Photoshop. The fireworks were made in Particle Illusion. Had to figure out how to use Particle Illusion first, but it was pretty straightforward. Then I added some sound in After Effects, and here 'tis. Happy 8th of September!

Bitter Disappointment



I really haven't started planning yet for this year's Halloween festivities, but I had stumbled across this test tube thing online, and thought - that would be so cool. It arrived today, and I've been whining to everyone who has had the bad fortune to get within conversation distance to me. It really isn't all that cool after all - no actual rising bubbles, no moving dials, and lots of cheap looking plastic. Although, I do commend the photographer for making me want to buy it. Guess I'm just gonna have to figure out how to build the real thing....

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Monkey Time



Hey! Two posts in a day! Since I apparently was sucked into a black hole for the month of August, I figure I should try to make up for it. Here's a quick little character I drew for a design meeting. My next game is all about the Tiki. It's gonna be fun. So naturally, gotta have a monkey in it.

I drew him in Flash, and then exported the solid shapes as .pngs. Once he was reassembled in Photoshop, I turned on the Preserve transparency, and did some quick shading using a dry brush sort of brush I made from one of the Spatter brushes. You just need to adjust the spacing and the angle jitter in the brush palette.

Unfortunately he didn't pass muster - "too young looking" - since it's a game for tweens. I'm not sure I quite agree, but I might tweak his face a little so he's not so "sweet."

"Inking" in Flash



More Decodables! Here are a few pages from my latest little book - The Toy Robot. These things are all about trying to get something half-way decent-looking in as little time as possible. The finals for this one were done in Flash.

The process is pretty straightforward. I have a sketch imported from Photoshop to use as reference, and draw all the lines using the pencil tool. Then with the little ink pot tool I go and change all the line widths for thick and thins. Then I convert the whole thing from Lines to Fills (you can do this in the Modify menu), and I clean up corners and edges to make the transitions between line widths nice and smooth. Then I used the paint bucket for fills, and the paint brush for the little highlights (the robot is supposed to be Gold Foil.)





This next book is done in a similar way, but there's some photoshop work at the end. After cleaning up the black lines in Flash, I export the lines as a .png at 300dpi and open that up in Photoshop.



Since the lines are so nice and clean, I can use the magic wand tool and select the areas I want to fill in with color, then I go up to the select menu and choose expand, and expand the selection by 2 pixels, and then on a layer below the lines, I hit alt+del to fill in the color.

I wanted to spice it up a little bit without having to do much shading so I brought in some patterns I got from wallpaper samples. After making a selection (and expanding it) I go to the layer with the wallpaper, and hit the mask button (it's at the bottom of the layers palette - it's a little gray box with a white circle.) I suppose you could just reverse your selection and delete the extra wallpaper, but this way, you can unlock the mask and move the pattern around and make adjustments.



I only have these two done so far. The rest I've sort of been stalling on because it means I have to try to draw a fishing boat. Ugh.