Re: Art question.
Posted by Crono on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 4:03am
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If it was done digitally, probably painter (which simulates pretty much every physical art tool imaginable).
Re: Art question.
Posted by Mephs on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 1:25pm
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Looks like a watercolour to me, but if it is, its either by someone quite accomplished. But with all these new fangled computers (I think thats what they're called) You can never really tell. Point is, its quite a good job either/or. Just out of curiousity, how many people in snarkpit would ever work in watercolours.
I haven't done any art in quite a while, I'm thinking of painting again (and obviously getting better). :smile:
Re: Art question.
Posted by Spartan on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 7:23pm
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I hate using watercolors; they are just too difficult to use. I end up having paint all over the place. I don't see how some of these artists get it to look so good. If I could get the same water color effect on a computer I'd go with the computer.
Re: Art question.
Posted by Naklajat on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 8:48pm
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word, spartan. i never finish any artwork because it never comes out
like i want it to(especially watercolor). if i had a program that could
emulate art tools i might actually finish something(ctrl+z is your
friend). i would also need a tablet and possibly a scanner, though...
im broke. i would definitely draw and "paint" more, though... it might
be something i invest in in the future.
btw, the first pic looks kinda like metal gear solid art, and the
second looks like a photograph except for the joker's exaggerated
features and the shadows on the womans right leg. i believe ive seen
some of alex ross' work, could be thinking of a different artist
though... one jumps out from memory in particular: a bunch of
reflective pots and pans in a pile, all with beautifully(and quite
realistically) distorted reflections. it inspired me to try watercolor,
though i was never any good at it, especially compared to the master
artists whom i always seem to compare my own work to... only to end up
self-criticizing unproductively... oh well, at least im always willing
to give it another shot
Re: Art question.
Posted by Leperous on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 9:19pm
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/hopes you didn't find this on a "casual" browse of furry websites
Re: Art question.
Posted by Adam Hawkins on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 9:35pm
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Methinks Leperous has been watching too much Bravo... :wink:
Re: Art question.
Posted by Spartan on
Mon Nov 29th 2004 at 11:36pm
Posted
2004-11-29 11:36pm
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Holy crap read that tutorial I posted. The guy colored the entire picture using a mouse and PSP 6. :eek:
Re: Art question.
Posted by ReNo on
Tue Nov 30th 2004 at 12:02am
Posted
2004-11-30 12:02am
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No offence to the tutorial or its writer, but personally I really don't like that picture.
Re: Art question.
Posted by Yak_Fighter on
Tue Nov 30th 2004 at 12:17am
Posted
2004-11-30 12:17am
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I'm pretty good at drawing unnatural and disproportioned people, think I should write a tutorial for that site?
Re: Art question.
Posted by Crono on
Tue Nov 30th 2004 at 4:23am
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Spartan, when you use watercolors you have to layer the paint. You begin with blacks and shadows (usually easier) and paint (with PAINT, you don't mix it with water). You then let it dry. and go in with mid tones and such. The entire point is, a good watercolor painting will take someone who knows what they're doing at least 12 hours (for a small painting) just to get the painting correct (or nice).
Seriously, it takes years, if not decades, to become good at painting, in particular watercolor painting.
Re: Art question.
Posted by Neural Scan on
Tue Nov 30th 2004 at 12:33pm
Posted
2004-11-30 12:33pm
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Location: England.
Watercolours aren't my favourite either :/
I disagree with how there is a 'right' way of using a certain medium. If it looks good, that's what matters, I would never criticise on how someone used the paint in the wrong way if it was a decent painting.
Edit: I guess it all depends on what kind of art it is :smile:
Re: Art question.
Posted by Foxpup on
Thu Dec 16th 2004 at 3:36am
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If you want to get a watercolour look without the effort, use Faber-Castell watercolour pencils. I've got 200 of 'em, and they're just awesome.
I'd do my "updated" avatar in watercolour pencil, but I've also got a CorelDRAW 3D modelling package with RDI ray tracer. Look AMAZING, but it's not the world's easiest tool...