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    Working on my Realistic Digital Painting

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    • Shams Nelson
      Shams Nelson last edited by

      Hey, so I never really do realistic type stuff (you can see on my site shamsnelson.com that my style is mostly colorful, cartoony illustrations with dark, thick line-work) but I want to expand my horizons. I worked on this and would really appreciate any critiques/suggestions on how to improve. (Especially pertaining to the brushwork -- I'd like a more painterly style... I don't know how to explain it exactly, but I love paintings that look realistic from far away but then very close up you see lots of brush strokes and unblended colors than might be expected...)

      Painting in PS with no adjustments and only basic, airbrush, and blending brush:

      0_1471287105496_digitalpainting-Falcon-Merlin.jpg

      After adjusting levels a bit:

      0_1471287168108_digitalpainting-Falcon-Merlin-adjusted.jpg

      Reference:

      0_1471287186411_magical-moments-with-merlin-inspired-nature-photography-by-shelley-myke.jpg

      www.shamsnelson.com

      mattramsey 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
      • Chip Valecek
        Chip Valecek SVS Team SVS OG last edited by

        Looking at your site and this piece here, that is a huge difference. I think you are on the right path. The head size looks smaller in yours. I would also suggest using a hard brush as well as the airbrush. Using the airbrush to much will muddy the colors quicker. Using the hard brush will define your shapes. Great start!


        https://www.instagram.com/chipvalecek/
        https://www.facebook.com/cvalecek
        http://www.cshellmedia.com/

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • mattramsey
          mattramsey @Shams Nelson last edited by

          @Shams-Nelson So how realistic do you want to go?

          Don't get me wrong--this is good and I can see where this is definitely more realistic than your portfolio work but I would say, again depending on how far you want to push this, you are a good base to now start really rendering the details.

          https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/mattramsey/
          https://mattramsey.artstation.com/
          https://twitter.com/mramseyART

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Shams Nelson
            Shams Nelson last edited by Shams Nelson

            @Chip-Valecek Thanks! Yea, that's a good tip. When working with the hard brush do you keep the opacity at a certain level, or have it set with pressure usually? Any technical tips in that regard. I know it's not one size fits all, but any specific pointers would be appreciated.

            @mattramsey Not really sure. Not photo-realistic though. The best explanation I can think of is what I put in my original post... "painterly style... I don't know how to explain it exactly, but I love paintings that look realistic from far away but then very close up you see lots of brush strokes and unblended colors than might be expected..."

            Something along these lines is the "realistic" style I like:

            alt text

            www.shamsnelson.com

            Chip Valecek mattramsey 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • audrey dowling
              audrey dowling last edited by audrey dowling

              If I were you, before continuing on the bird, I would work the background a bit more. if you look at the photo, it's a bit lighter than yours and there's some kind of a really light halo around the bird, as well as a soft reflective light. it would allow to soften the edges of the bird as well as changing the values and colours relationships in your painting

              website: https://audreydowling.wordpress.com/
              twitter: https://twitter.com/audreydowling
              facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Audrey-Dowling-Artist-Illustrator-498582176906242/timeline/?ref=bookmarks

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Chip Valecek
                Chip Valecek SVS Team SVS OG @Shams Nelson last edited by

                @Shams-Nelson I usually keep the brush at 100% opacity and let the pen pressure do the rest.


                https://www.instagram.com/chipvalecek/
                https://www.facebook.com/cvalecek
                http://www.cshellmedia.com/

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • mattramsey
                  mattramsey @Shams Nelson last edited by

                  @Shams-Nelson Perfect!

                  Now do a study of that exact piece --I promise you you will learn a ton and be a lot closer to your goal!

                  I'd love to see the results!

                  https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/mattramsey/
                  https://mattramsey.artstation.com/
                  https://twitter.com/mramseyART

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Shams Nelson
                    Shams Nelson last edited by

                    @audrey-dowling Awesome thanks! That's some very actionable advice. Softening edges is something I have very little practice in so it should be a good challenge.

                    @Chip-Valecek Ok cool, thanks for the insight 🙂

                    @mattramsey Gah! I used to hate doing master studies in art school, but I'm sure you're very right. Ok, I'll have to put that on my agenda and post the results.

                    www.shamsnelson.com

                    mattramsey 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • MOO
                      MOO SVS OG last edited by

                      Beautiful! Really beautiful! I'm impressed.

                      Marsha Ottum Owen

                      Shams Nelson 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Shams Nelson
                        Shams Nelson @MOO last edited by

                        @Marsha-Kay-Ottum-Owen 🙂 Why thank you!

                        www.shamsnelson.com

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • mattramsey
                          mattramsey @Shams Nelson last edited by

                          @Shams-Nelson said in Working on my Realistic Digital Painting:

                          @mattramsey Gah! I used to hate doing master studies in art school, but I'm sure you're very right. Ok, I'll have to put that on my agenda and post the results.

                          Hmm, why is that? Too hard or did you feel like it was a waste of time (like: you would rather be doing your own) or something else?

                          Just curious because I've never really heard someone mention that before.

                          https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/mattramsey/
                          https://mattramsey.artstation.com/
                          https://twitter.com/mramseyART

                          Shams Nelson 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Shams Nelson
                            Shams Nelson @mattramsey last edited by

                            @mattramsey yea, takes a lot of time and I usually didn't learn too much, mostly because of my mindset of just wanting to get the thing done probably.

                            The reason i like making art is to create things from my imagination. Give those things form. Or else to explore and see what happens. Master studies don't really have those aspects and even if I were to get it perfect I'd think... so what? They already did it. I haven't contributed anything new....

                            www.shamsnelson.com

                            mattramsey 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • mattramsey
                              mattramsey @Shams Nelson last edited by

                              @Shams-Nelson I definitely get where you are coming from regarding not contributing anything new and wanting to create from your imagination.

                              But i guess i don't really understand not learning anything from master studies. I don't mean this to sound combative but: maybe you aren't doing it right?
                              I mean, if you were able copy it exactly then presumably you will have gone through most of the steps the original artist did an you should have learned quite a bit. That's not to say you'll know perfectly emulate the style on your own but doing many copies from that artist will get you closer every time.

                              It's probably not for everyone and I'm sure there is value in slogging through the process of doing everything on your own but I just feel that master copies are such a powerful learning tool.

                              https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/mattramsey/
                              https://mattramsey.artstation.com/
                              https://twitter.com/mramseyART

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Dulcie
                                Dulcie SVS OG last edited by

                                I'm coming to the conclusion that doing master studies is a bit like being Rogue from X-Men....you don't actually become the artist you're studying, but by going through the process you absorb some of their powers.

                                And if you do that enough times, with enough artists where you'd like to achieve the same quality of work, then eventually you'll do just that.. That's the plan anyway 🙂

                                www.dulciemascord.com
                                https://www.instagram.com/dulciemascord
                                https://twitter.com/dulciemascord
                                https://www.facebook.com/dulciemascord

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