Society of Visual Storytelling

    SVSLearn Forums

    • Register
    • Login
    • Search
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Search

    Critique Wanted: Bongo and Clyde

    Artwork
    4
    7
    378
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Brad Newman
      Brad Newman last edited by

      Hi everyone, I'd welcome some feedback on my June entry. I tend to struggle with color and with the transition from pencil to digital. I am comfortable working in pencil and I'm happy with where I end up but then I get it into Photoshop and while I'm generally happy with the final outcome I do feel it could be better. I've posted the sketch and final below. Thanks in advance!
      IMG_0372.JPG
      Monkey and Croc SVS June.png

      theprairiefox 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
      • theprairiefox
        theprairiefox @Brad Newman last edited by

        @Brad-Newman I think you have done a pretty good job with your colors. Though I am no expert.

        A couple of tips I have been trying to work in lately that I think help are:

        • Use as few colors as possible, if I can go monochromatic all the better. There is less chance of color clashes and colors pulling you to the wrong the focal points.
          • I think you are doing this pretty well you only really have 3 colors Orange, Green, and Blue. One thing you might entertain is to make the tree stems less of a red-brown and more of an orange-brown. If you wanted you could make the water green instead of blue (I did that in my piece to remove a color)
        • My second thing is to make sure the values work even after applying color.
          • As you can see below your values are working pretty well even after applying color. Though you might want to lighten up Bongo just a hair. Clyde's value contrast with his background really bring him out.

        monkey-and-croc-svs-june-bw.png

        -The Prairie Fox
        https://www.instagram.com/theprairiefox
        https://www.theprairiefox.com

        Brad Newman 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • lauren_g
          lauren_g last edited by

          Hello!

          I saw this an thought that your image would POP a bit better if you lighten the background, so I made this quick mock up. I also tinted the monkey slighter more red to contrast with it’s environment better. These small changes with improve the overall contrast in the image. Hopefully this is helpful to you 👍

          21EB702A-685D-42E0-A932-62D1F4E4FADE.png 9C0A9C03-BA4D-4A6C-BBA6-6C61F8E00CC2.jpeg

          Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artzieren/

          Braxton 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • Braxton
            Braxton @lauren_g last edited by Braxton

            I agree with the @theprairiefox’s comments. In particular, looking at the image in greyscale is often really useful (I do this by adding a top layer set to a blend mode of saturation and then filling it with white). Looking at your piece in greyscale, it feels like the values might be a bit too clustered around the middle in terms of brightness. You might experiment with applying a levels adjustment to make the darks a little darker and the lights a little lighter. Here's quick example of what a small layers adjustment could look like (original on the left):
            1593511832316-monkey-and-croc-svs-june-resized.png

            Brad Newman 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • Brad Newman
              Brad Newman @theprairiefox last edited by

              @theprairiefox Thanks very much! I'll have a look making that water a bit more green and the trunks more orange-y.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Brad Newman
                Brad Newman @Braxton last edited by

                @Braxton Thanks for the reply! Yeah, I do tend to stick to the middle. It's hard to add contrast. Good advice. 🙂

                Braxton 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Braxton
                  Braxton @Brad Newman last edited by

                  @Brad-Newman One suggestion a friend gave me is to take an illustration where you like the distribution of lights/darks/contrast, turn it to greyscale and keep it visible as a guide while you're drawing. You're not trying to copy it per se, just using it as a guide if things start to skew too light or two dark (or not enough contrast).

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • First post
                    Last post