A Lesson in Light and Color
A lesson in Light and Color
When working on illustrations, there are a number of things I like to take into consideration to make a solid piece. As an artist, I'm aware of all of the 'official' ones, but I don't necessarily remember to execute them. This sometimes leaves the illustration imbalanced in quality.
For this piece I focused on Composition, Line Quality, Color, Texture, and Light. But I think that Light and Color were the most important factors in pulling this together.
Composition
I think I did a pretty good job of this, I have a number of things that help direct the viewer to the focal point (the two sleeping heroes). I have the boy looking at and taking a picture of them, I have things in the foreground literally framing the characters, and I already determined what parts of the piece will be darkest and lightest.
Line Quality
When creating line art, I don't always go the same route, but I prefer lines that don't look too clean. My lines tend to have an almost pencil line quality to them, just a little bit of texture, and very few perfectly straight lines. This works well with my style, which doesn't tend to be very rigid.
If you notice, the lines for the objects in the foreground are just a bit thicker than those in the mid-ground. This is enough to help the eyes not become confused when looking at a complex image.
Color
I don't usually do this, but for this illustration I tried limit my colors to only variations of a base 5. It evolved beyond that as I worked, but that starting point kept the piece incredibly unified.
Texture
It isn't always necessary, but a simple texture added to a piece and prevent something created digitally from becoming too flat. Some artist prefer that look, but I've found that I my work looks most finished when I use it. Although, it possible I use it to just hide some of my mistakes...
Light
But besides that, this piece looks as good as it does because of the lighting I chose, and how that works with the colors. There is an atmosphere that is warm and soft that you just can't feel looking at just the line work alone. If I chose any other option, in all likely hood I would have confused the viewer on what to focus.
In conclusion, I had a lot of things pulling this piece together. And honestly I can look at this piece and see several mistakes I'd love to fix, but that's just the curse of a developing artist. But I think my choice of using a palette and pushing the lighting to be as dramatic and soft as possible made it one of my best pieces.
Afternote
These are the characters Clint Barton and Kate Bishop from Marvel's Hawkeye comics. I made this for a Comic Book Covers class last year.
Really beautiful job. That texture after the color really seals the deal, great touch I'm not sure everyone would take the extra time to do.
It's not even something I always take time to do, but it really does help the piece. so thanks!
Love it. Perhaps I could use images of yours for some of my posts. I have a lot of stories that I want to bring to Steemit from my outside blog, and I want to substitute their images by Steemit ones. Could I?
sorry no, i appreciate the compliment, but I would prefer if you didn't. thanks. :)
You got magic in your hands.
aw wow thank you!!
thank you for the explanations
no problem! I'm glad I took some process screencaps! haha :D
Knew the characters right away! Great post!
They are great and extremely underrated. The Hawkeye comics by Fraction will always touch my heart! <3
wonderful illustrations!! Lighting is very important in creating visual stimulation.
I honestly don't use it enough. I get too lazy. But I've been trying to do it more and more.
I have the same problem, I know to do stuff I just get interested in the composition and there goes my lighting effect until a later date when I realize I past up a chance to do apply it to a new piece of art.
WOW! I am in love with your style. The color palette you used is perfect and expresses that tired feeling you captured in your subject. I really appreciate the interesting vantage point that you place the viewer - this always makes the image so much more captivating and really draws the viewer in. I love your line quailty - the sketchy bits that still come through. I am following you and can't wait to see more of your work!
Thank you, the vantage point was one of the more difficult aspects to create, so I'm glad it's appreciated. <3 Thank you for following me! :)
Followed and Upvoted @SHEAGAR
thanks!
Wow amazing work ! I mostly do furniture design and concept illustration. Definitely will follow and look forward to more work!
that is a pretty different field, but it's always good to appreciate other kinds of art. <3 thank you!
Awesome work, thank you for sharing the steps.
Also what are your influences? You have a distinct style, very different from comics I have seen :) (Followed)
ooo thank you! and uh, HMM. I guess I've never thought specifically about my style before, or what's influenced it. I've read a ton of manga growing up, but I wouldn't categorize it as that...But I also really enjoy a ton of recent american animation styles. So that could be influencing?? I honestly don't know. Ima have to think on that, thanks!