Digital vs. Traditional: My Experience Part 1 | ULOG #TWENTY
Back again with more art. Sorry I've been away, but I've been busy.
This painting above was a school piece. It helped me to get my foot in the door with some local ad agencies here in Vegas
This is basically the last of my traditional work before I started going digital.
These medieval paintings were for the Excalibur Casino. They ended up being comps and the finishes were done by a more famous artist who used mine as the basis of starting his.
I wasn't good at backgrounds and I wanted the freedom to move my image around. I wasn't very good with Photoshop at this time, but I was able to isolate objects and move them around. They were painted traditionally with physical paint, but I separated them onto layers so that I could move things around. That's why they feel so "cut out." I comped these in Xara.
The would have hired him to do this preliminary work but he was unavailable. That was why I got the job. I liked being able to create shadows and straight lines in the computer.
This stuff was still so new to me. It was hard to transition from painting traditionally into digital painting.
I used filters and effects to help cover up the parts of the painting I didn't finish on time.
This was one I wished that I knew how to paint in Photoshop with layers. I was learning as I went along.
I hate painting text because the client always wants to change the words. It's often better that text is digital when the words aren't yours.
This painting seems awkward until you realize that all the blank white space is for the words.
I realized that I could just paint the parts I wanted to traditionally then cut and paste them digitally into my assignments. I could just photocopy my approved sketch onto colored paper and start painting on it directly.
I started doing this all the time with my jobs. Doing this became fun for me.
I'm kind of posting this for my students so that they don't get so hung up on their Wacom tablets. I want them to realize there are a million ways to get things done. The most important one is the one that works reliably.
I also posting this so that my students can see how I slowly transitioned from traditional painting into digital painting.
My next post will be about my "breakthrough" paintings that got me into the mindset of thinking digitally.
Feel free to sign up on Steemit and follow me. It's free, and upvotes are digital currency. The most important thing is:
DON'T LOSE YOUR PASSWORD.
The second most important thing is:
DON'T LOSE YOUR PASSWORD.
Thanks Everybody,
@PixelColada
Posted from my blog with SteemPress : http://www.pixelcolada.com/2018/07/30/digital-vs-traditional/
Dear Artzonian, thanks for using the #ArtzOne hashtag. Your work is valuable to the @ArtzOne community. Quote of the week: Art, freedom and creativity will change society faster than politics. -Victor Pinchuk