In this lesson I take the same photograph and create one image with warm, light, early-morning colors and in the second image I change the colors to be more blues and greens emphasizing the late afternoon light. I call this color bias.
Here's the reference photograph.
Starting the image with a line drawing of the important shapes. I'm working on Uart 400 sanded paper with a thin acrylic wash to color the paper.
Line drawing of the important shapes |
Start blocking in the basic shapes. Keep in mind your purpose for the image - morning light. |
The final layers are an adjustment from the reference photo to emphasize light. Most of the colors I used are either mid-value or light values. If you took a b/w photo of the final piece (which I suggest as a great way to evaluate your values) most of the grays should be on the lighter side of mid-tones with maybe 30% of the image in shadow.
Final image. The little colors on the left side are the pastel colors I used in the demo. |
Here are the steps in creating "Afternoon Light".
Step 2 of "Afternoon Light" |
Step 3 of "Afternoon Light" |
No comments:
Post a Comment