The
painting of 'Tenzeni Port' posed an interesting challenge. I wanted to
capture the atmosphere of the old steamships of the Murray River in
Australia, transported to the Birrin homeworld. You can read the story
behind this painting here.
Following is a walk-through of my painting process as it usually proceeds.
The first stage of any image is often a rough, rapidly
produced painting using large photoshop brushes and grayscale
only. I leave colors till much later, as at this stage composition is
the main concern.
This process of basic, rough grayscale tests can be time consuming. As well
as thinking about placement of elements in the image, one must also
start to refine the designs of the objects and characters. Here I
experimented with a series of aquaduct like overpasses that alowed
vehicles to cross large sections of floatforest. As for the ship, I
introduced some south-asian influences to the boats roof.
After
finding the aquaducts unsuitable, I started to work on the lighting and
foreground elements. The trees and pier were conceived to make the
scene more intimate and enclosed, as if this is a hidden port somewhere
in a vast forest.
Now
that I was reasonably happy with the composition of the scene, I
mirrored the image. This allows you to spot any potential perspective
issues you would not otherwise notice. Unhappy with the level of visual
noise in the foreground, I removed some of the trees to open it out, and
made the ship taller and more imposing. Dappled light was also added to
give the impression of a late afternoon/evening setting.
The
composition now complete, I turn the rough painting to 15%
transparent, and start tracing over the top of. This allows me to
work out all the finer details I need to know as line art, before the painting proper
begins.
At this stage I often make a basic 3D model of the main
scene elements. This irons out final perspective errors I missed
previously. It can be extremely simple.
Now painting begins. Colors are blocked in and rendered to a basic level, and constant tweaks are made. This is all done under the lineart layer. At this stage the green water was meant to resemble a river filled with clay and nutrients washed down from the mountains.
Further
painting, this time on the foreground. The dead trees are reminiscent
of those found in flooded artifical lakes on earth. At this stage I
imagined the vessel in motion, and gave it a large bow wave.
Detailing
of the foreground trees was progressing in this image. I tried to make
the bark resemble the eucalypts of the Murray River, while making sure
they stayed alien through the concentric rings on the trunks.
The final image.
Any further questions, feel free to ask in the comments below.
3 comments:
Amazing work, as always, and thank you so much for showing us your process. I'm especially intrigued by the technique of blocking out shapes in grayscale, then tracing the lines, _then_ making colors under the lines. I've always done lines, then colors, then shadows, but your way certainly looks better (although that may be, you know, the talent and effort that went into it...anyway)
What program did you use to make the 3d model?
Beautiful work Alex. Out of personal preference I think I enjoyed some of the greyscale images more than the final but the execution of the final is superb. The process is, as Dan already mentioned, nice to see ;)
hey this is very cool. Following!
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