Wednesday, October 31, 2012

2000AD Doodles

Fine liners and fat liners, and a bit of brush pen for solid blacks.



Brush pen and Hunt 107 nib.



Monday, October 29, 2012

Hellboy OZComic Sequential Challenge

Just finished this page last night for the Oz Comics sequential fortnightly challenge.


This was a real sod of a page - libraries, skeletons, 10 panels. Actually 10 panels isn't a problem with a well written script and this one was (I've of course deleted all my files and can't find the writer's name. Anthony someone?). It ended up taking much more time than I wanted, working 2 hours a night over 5 days or so.

I didn't think I'd do a post about this one so I didn't do any production scans but my method is pretty much the same for every page I do. Check out this post for more on my methods.

Here are my thumbnails though.




Not very clear but I did change the angle on a couple of panels. Not sure why but there's always a bit of difference between the thumbs and the final page. Especially as I never do the thumbs to scale. these were done on a loose bit of A4 printing paper. You can also see some calculations for splitting the page into 3 panels width ways.

Here my most used tools (minus a Staedtler Mars rubber). So from left to right I have a Hunt 107 (I think) - a nice hard stainless steel nib which does fine lines and can, with pressure, do quite fat lines, a fairly common nib this one but too blackened for me to find out what it is now but it does fatter lines, a pentel water colour brush pen filled with Pebeo ink, trusty, trusty white out and a line tool - this one can adjust its width for very fine to very fat lines, just be sure your straight edge is raised off the page otherwise ink will seep under and make a ink go all over the place.

On this page though, I only used the brush for filling in blacks and a few fine lines.












A Panel

A panel from a little project I'm working on.




Thursday, October 18, 2012

Oz Comic Challenge Ironman

Here's an image I did for theOz Comic weekly challenge but didn't get to sending off - a little unfinished perhaps. I was inspired by Moebius' painting of Ironman and Simon Bisley's ABC warriors.

I sketched it up in pencil and coloured it in with the kids' textas.


I then scanned it into photoshop, cleaned it up a bit and added the black.


The original now sits on my daughter's wall next to her bed and keeps the monsters away.