Painting An Amulet

Painting An Amulet in GIMP

  • Software: GIMP (or Photoshop)
  • Level: Advanced
  • Subject: Golden Amulet

For the past couple of days, I have been attempting at trying to paint gold and other glossy/reflective materials more realistically. I realized, when working on Raged Ravan, that the approach I am currently taking does not seem to be apt.

Lineart

Amulet - Line Art

This is a pretty random design, and is not very pleasing. It can actually be shaped any way. The focus of this study was actually on painting gold texture.

Gold - Study

Before working on the above line art, I wanted to study the way a golden glossy surface behaved. Hence I started with a spherical gold surface.

Gold sphere - line art Gold sphere - flat

My first impulse was to shade it with usual gradation of shadows, midtones and highlights - but that is what I have been doing and the result is less than satisfactory. After a bit of pondering, I realized that the gold (or any other metal) has a highly reflective surface. It would almost be like a mirror with a faint yellow tint. Basically, we need to render the area behind the viewer in the weird fish eye kind of distortion on the circle.

That means, I need to first assume there is something behind the viewer and for sake of simplicity, I assumed a normal horizon line and a source of light.

Gold sphere - horizon line Gold sphere - horizon line rendered

Hence I tried a couple of different darker shades. Initially I tried a warmer dark yellow, and later settled for a cool dark yellow tone. The convex surface of the spherical surface would create a curved line. It would dip down at the center if the eye level is above the horizon. It would bulge upwards in the center, if the eye level is below the horizon and the viewer is looking up at the sphere. It may take a while to figure out and visualize it. But after a bit of practice, and study of actual reflective objects, it can be intuitive. ( Note that a sphere has convex surface. If the surface is concave, the horizon lines drawn on it will be flipped. )

Gold sphere - highlights

Applying highlights is the fun part. Assume the light source and put a contrasting hightlight tone. You will notice that it is still a bit ambiguous in terms of whether it is convex (sphere) or concave. To fix this, render the slight gradations of the shadow areas.

Gold sphere rendered

Gold Texture Applied To Amulet

Now let us look at the the same principle applied to the amulet.

Amulet - Flats

Though the amulet is not a sphere, I designed the lineart to depict the convex surfaces.

Amulet - Horizon Line Amulet - Horizon Rendered

The horizon line is drawn quite similar to what we did with the golden sphere, but I am taking into account the actual shape of the ‘leaf’ of the ornament.

Amulet - Painting

Applying the hard shadows and the contrasting hightlights, the amulet seems to be better rendered than my earlier attempts.

Working on this, I did realize that there can be further experimentation done in terms of the colors and saturation levels for the different areas. Also, multiple light sources and different settings should make up for hours of study.

By all means, the above is not a perfect rendering. I am open to any views and suggestions - use the comment form below. I would be happy to know about other approaches to rendering the gold and other shiny surface.

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Remove the shine (white hightlights) and place them onto a new layer

Use your dodge tool to smooth the gradiants of the shade and highlights and with a soft brush smudge the layers into one another to create a smooth transition

Now apply the shine with a large soft brush using a offset white (almost white) apply a few layers of screen till your happy and then use one blured white brush for the light reflection

As its gold you can use bump mapping to emboss texture or details (bumps, imperfections when the pendant was molded of something), if you want you can leave the shine out completly and use a rendered yellow/white spot light and whack the metalic properties up

Thanks danS for the detailing the process on improving on the work. :)

I will surely be trying this out.