Too Old For Halloween?

Too late for Halloween, perhaps. But I really enjoyed working on this illustration.

After doodling with GIMP’s new inking tool, I had this urge to try it out. After some seasonal inspiration, and several concepts, roughs and sketches, I felt pretty confident to do a illustration over them. This was created completely using the Inking Tool of GIMP 2.6 and some use of the upgraded Selection Tool.

Visit the devaintART entry page if you want to try your hand at coloring this (do link back), or if you would like to see a larger image to see the details.

Too Old for Halloween? – Illustration

GIMP 2.6 SplashI am quite in a great mood test driving GIMP 2.6 release.

It was released quite some time back, and had installed it on my Windows boot. But I had been lazy to install it on my Ubuntu boot where I usually work. The Ubuntu 8.04 did not have a backport of the latest GIMP 2.6 – and since it was not available through Synaptic Package Manager, I just waited a bit for Ubuntu 8.10 to be released on October 30.

Layout

With the upgrade complete, the first thing I did was to check out the new layout. The menu strip from the tool box has been moved to a ‘placeholder’ window. When you select the ‘Keep windows on top’ for utility and dockable windows in the Preferences (Edit > Preferences > Window Management), the setup is quite uncluttered.

GIMP 2.6 Layout

Frankly, I was used to the older layout and it does not make much of a difference. But some of you might find it handy if you keep shifting between different tools, to have the tool box always stay on top, and not be cluttered with menu items.
Read the rest of this entry »

Regular reader would have noticed that there are no new posts in the Clipart section.

For past couple of month, Chazlynne Deguair and I have been working on creating a website/blog dedicated to clipart. The drive for this was the great feedback and traffic driven at KalaaLog.com through searches containing “clipart” in them.

Chazlynne and I have been posting there regularly and it has more than 50 new clipart, available for download, free for personal and non-commercial uses.

Head over to ClipArtLog.com and do subscribe to its feeds. (You can subscribe for an email update too).

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Subject: Tutorial

This tutorial, would be on a similar technique as the earlier tutoril on drawing a fish. The subject is a little bit complicated – that is the difference. But inspite of that, you will notice that even this subject can be approached with the ‘simply and build over’ method of sketching and drawing.

You can either work on pencil, eraser, pen and paper, or on digital medium using GIMP or Photoshop. You will be able to download the digital file either as XCF or as PSD for your study. The different steps are in different layers.

Rough

Draw A Tortoise - 0 - Rough Guide

The tortoise basically consists of the carapace, the limbs and the head. The tail too, but it is not visible from the angle I will be drawing it. You will see that my ‘simple’ shapes are not that simple as compared to the earlier fish tutorial. But if you squint your eyes, you will notice that they are all still the basic shapes. The carapase is an oval, the head is a rounded rectangle, the limbs are triangles. After a while of sketching you can actually imagine these guides as you draw.

If you feel uncomfortable with the slightly complex shapes, you can start from the basics of simpler shapes and build to this point.

Draw A Tortoise - 1 - Rough

If you are doing this on paper, rember to use a HB or lighter pencil. Put in the strokes lightly. On the computer, do the rough lines on a layer called ‘Rough’.

Sketch

Over the rough, you will be sketching. Again, imagine the below guides. The red and browns are marking the eyes, and creases of mouth and neck.
Draw A Tortoise - 2 - Sketch Guide

The blues are the nails/claws. The green is the segmentation of the shell/carapace. If you feel you are uncomfortable imagining the squished brick like structure, draw it out lightly over the rough.

Start sketching over the rough with darker pencil like 2B or 3B, trying to hold true to your rough work.

Draw A Tortoise - 3 - Sketch

In GIMP or Photoshop, create a new layer called ‘Sketch’ above, and reduce the opacity of ‘Rough’ layer to 30% or 50%. Take a pressure sensitive brush and start drawing on the ‘Sketch’ layer.

Do not worry if the lines are not clean, that is what we will be doing in the next step. The focus here would be to make the form solid.

Lineart

If you are working on paper, run the eraser over the drawing lightly, to make your sketch light. Your rough work should have disappeared. Take a pen and draw the lineart over the sketch. Once you are done, erase all the pencil markings.

Draw A Tortoise - 4 - Basic Lineart

On the digital end, turn off the ‘Rough’ layer, bring down the opacity of the ‘Sketch’ layer, and create a new layer called ‘Lineart’ or ‘Basic Lineart’. Use a simple brush/inking brush, with pressure sensitivity turned off for opacity, and turned on for size.

Once the basic lineart is done, on the paper, go in and thicken some of the lines. On the digital medium, you can either create a new layer, or work on the ‘Lineart’ layer itself, and using a thicker brush than the previous, thicken some of the form defining lines – like the carapace/shell, the head and neck, and the limbs.

Draw A Tortoise - 5 - Completed Lineart with weight

Do not thicken each and every line, that defeats the purpose of keeping variation.

Download: Draw A Tortoise – XCF | PSD

Download XCF version if you use GIMP and PSD for Photoshop. All the steps along with the guides are placed as different layers. You will need to switch the visibility on and off on those layers.

Drop in a comment below if you would like some drawing tutorials on specific subjects (or you can contact me).

If you liked this tutorial, please subscribe to KalaaLog.com feeds (or use the email subscription form above), and pass this link to your friends.

« Older entries § Newer entries »