Family of Frankensteins – the Noodling


I said yesterday that I usually have to force myself to stop working on an illustration otherwise I run the risk of noodling at it until I’ve messed it up. One of the dangers of working on art in Photoshop is that you can noodling on the piece in even greater detail and far longer than you can a piece on paper or canvas. With all the layers and the ability to undo the things you don’t like you spend hours on some fussy bit, decide you don’t like it, delete it and then spend a few more hours fussing at it differently. Because I know how easily I can get caught doing that I try to finish the majority of my illustrations before I scan them into the computer. I want to use Photoshop as sparingly as possible.

For this piece I used the program to bump up the color and to add some highlights that I didn’t manage to do on the original. I like the more vibrant (garish) colors but I’m not sure that this is actually an improvement over the original painting.

Family of Frankensteins


I finished this painting recently. It had been a few weeks since I participated in the Watercolor Course and I wanted to see what I could do without the time limit imposed by being in class. It took a couple of weeks to do from start to finish – mostly because I could only work on it a bit at a time. Unless the effect you’re going for is a big smeary mess you need to wait for the paints to dry between layers. So I’d get ten or twenty minutes of painting in each day until I finally decided I should stop. I’m a big noodler when I’m doing art so I generally have to decide that I’ve done enough at some point and walk away. I’ve learned that I can mess up a piece with too much noodling.

Watercolor 3/19/10 – Creepy Cuddles


This is the last of the paintings I did as a student for Molly Murrah’s Watercolor Magic. If you ever watch the class videos you’ll occasionally hear my voice making comments or asking questions. You’ll also see the painting exercises I did as part of the class.

Molly is doing a new Watercolor Course starting soon. The live sessions are free to attend and can be watched here starting at 10 am (Seattle time). I’m not one of the students this time around but I’ll be relaying comments and questions from the class chatroom so you might hear my voice during the broadcast.

Watercolor 3/19/10 – Groovy


The final week of the Watercolor Course wasn’t as satisfying as the previous ones. That’s no slight on the teacher. The trouble was that I’d started to feel enough mastery over the medium that I just wanted to paint what I wanted to paint. I didn’t feel like doing more exercises. I was a little more ambitious with the side paintings I planned and felt a little frustrated that I didn’t have time to work on them. I was in class as a proxy for creativeLIVE’s online audience so it was inappropriate for me to ignore the assigned work to do my own thing.

This one didn’t get finished.

Watercolor 3/12/10 – Dogtective


I did my favorite paintings on the third week of class. At point I’d gotten used to the paints and tools enough that I could begin to predict what sort of image I’d be able to end up with.

I’m not that big a fan of stories of anthropomorphic animals. I enjoy Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and company but I have a harder time wrapping my mind around them when they appear in serious works like Omaha the Cat Dancer, Hepcats and Grandeville. In those works the animal nature of the characters is usually intended metaphorically. The characters are cats, monkeys, badgers and whatnot only up to a point. The question of how a civilization of multiple sentient animal species (many of which are prey to each other in our world) arose is pretty much ignored. I have a tendency to world build down to tiny details in my own work and to deconstruct the worlds built in stories of other writers and artists. The closer the story is drawn to “reality” the harder a time I have in just accepting it.

One of the few anthropomorphic adventure comics that I’m able to read without getting bogged down in questions of why a horse and canary are the same size (and having sex) is Usagi Yojimbo. That one probably works for me because Stan Sakai’s art is blatantly cartoony. I can take it seriously because the art isn’t realistic. Go figure.

Anyway, here’s a dog in a suit.