Non-photorealistic Renders (NPR)
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The obvious problem with this is the face on the attacker. I'm very close to giving up on this altogether, but a previous version of the illustration is already in the book, and replacing it would mean resetting the entire page to ensure that the new image fits. Plus... I don't really have anything else ready to take its place.
I think this size is closer to the actual printed size, which explains why I went with such bold ink strokes. When it was displayed full-size, the inking was overpowering, but at this scale, you can see that it's not really all that bad.
Print scale is one of the most frequent issues I see with a lot of the NPR work in this group. Most of the sketch looks would only print as full-size illustrations. In most cases, the sketched lines would close up and just become an odd gray-scale effect if actually printed in a book. Now, for online work, that's not an issue. But if you are thinking of taking your work to paper, scale is something to think about.
Another question: On the attacker's outstretched arm, I think I need to decrease the shadows on the top of his arm and increase them on the bottom. Do you guys agree? The dual lighting rig I use creates accurate shadows, but there's something off about how they are layered in this illustration.
This is a very cute illustration. I like the simplified colors, and the simple geometry definitely takes it to NPR territory. Although... it kinda has a video game look to it, I think kids would dig it in a story book. I definitely like the moutains and clouds. Compositionwise, the centaur is lost next to the well/fountain. In a wide shot like this, I would suggest moving him significantly forward so that we can see him more clearly. After all, we don't need him to establish scale because there are steps and doors in the illustration. And consider why we're seeing so much lawn and so little sky; the illustration horizon line seems to be a bit high. Finally, think about the colors of the flags. Are they they so muted because you're sticking with a muted color story of blues, greens, purples and cool colors? In white, red or yellow, they would "pop" more than they do now.
Anyway – great job. You are really making headway with this particular style!
This one is a comic I did a ways back as a sort of promo for the upcoming sci-fi novel that I still haven't finished (just never seems to be enough time in the day).
The character is a Genesis Neo that I modified - I'm usually a big fan of the Raiya characters. The alien is a modified "Kuril" figure from The AntFarm.
I did my compositing in Photoshop and the text in Illustrator.
I also ended up making a quick animated comic out of it in Blender both for fun, and because I wanted to learn the Blender sequencer. At the time I did it for Instagram and it had to be under 15 seconds so it goes a bit faster than I would like, but I thought it worked out. I don't think I can embed an Instagram post here, so here's a link: https://www.instagram.com/p/q72c05AUyS/
yes, you are very right, thanks for that/those observation (s) !
I think the arm looks fine as it is. Maybe just post both versions here :)
wow that's super clean, really enjoyed the animation - I think it adds a lot to the story
Here's a Carrara render. In post work I mainly using depth pass, shadow pas,s toon pro pass, coverage pass and Carrara's NPR - which I revisted after seeing @Vysur's excelent image in the Carrara forum..
In Carrara the toonpro pass, the coverage pass and the NPR pass all give different lines. The toonpro is an extra plugin - the others are native to Carrara.
Postwork with Topaz and overlays by Fotosketcher.
cheers :)
I tried to do this in 3dl, but kept running into problems. I had INTENDED on doing some intense godrays coming over the horizon but I couldn't get it to work right. Meh.
great image though - only thing that doesnt gel is the woman looks flat
Carrara render - topaz work over. Used a shadow catcher to superimpose on a previously rendered background.
Thanks again, mmitchell_houston, for all very useful insights and comments.
I have placed centaur there, because it was in the point, where the lines from
rule of thirds were crossed, but I were also not so happy with the placement.
Will have to experiment more.
Looks good to me, @timmins.william! Very much like a painting. So this is done in iRay?
The only thing I would suggest is to try to add some "atmosphere" over the tops of those hills to make it look like they're farther away, some light blue or white would do it.
Thanks, @head wax! I'll probably revisit motion comics in the future, too.
Now this is fantasy illustrated! it reminds me of the stuff I used to see in Dragon and Dungeon magazines back in the day.
Yeah, I had been struggling to get some good distance haze but ... meh. ;)
And it's Iray then run through Fotosketcher (which is awesome).
Here's another Iray + Fotosketcher.
@timmins.william - four arms, huh? It took me a few to figure out what was odd in the picture, lol. It looks good. Love the mellow colors and the painterly effect. The sand line might be a little too straight, suggest a bit of variation, but works either way.
When I'm in a bad mood (which is almost always) my art generally cycles between dark (to vent) and light (to distract myself).
Here I'm cycled back to dark...
http://willbear.deviantart.com/art/Stelae-o-684337427
(mild nudity)
Thank you Mr Garrett
Big Fan of the original BSG and the reboot. Redid this one several times. Not sure I'm satisfied with it but it's cool nontheless.
It is beyond cool, @tkdrobert.
Nice, tkdrobert!
And another in a series of vaguely Lovecraft inspired works.
Mild gore.
http://willbear.deviantart.com/art/Last-Castle-o-684395446
Carrara render passes worked up in Topaz etc.
'The Body of Christ, The Tree of Life.'
It's a follow on to an image I made for a religious prize a few years ago. The first image is now owned by The Uniting Church.
I am definitely digging the Dragon Magazine vibe (Thanks JOHNGARRETT -- I really digged those back in the day, too!). That is a very interesting item on the ground, and the painterly effect on the face is nice. The shadows don't line up to the feet, though...
Fascinating image. I'm intrigued on multiple levels, especially seeing stigmata on one so young. I'm puzzled by the duality expressed in the body, but the hair seems to be a single piece that crosses the two textures. Is this symbolizing nature crossing the boundry twixt man/nature? Or am I reaching? Nevertheless, fascinating (and when I'm in a better mood, I'll go look at your "dark" illustrations – this just isn't the day for it).
Little experiement with Topaz.
thanks you for that and your insightful comments once more. Ah the image is all about suggestion, with something like this its best to let the viewer take away what they find for themselves. And that is usually related to their life experiences or knowledge or culture/myths.
Ha ha thanks, can't get away with anything here! Yes the back leg is raised off the ground (because he has seen something bad and is stepping backwarsd) hence the shadow being weird. I debated long and hard whether to fix it but thought I could get away with it - that'll teach me!
looking good especially the foreground faces and the chap on the lefts musculature.
Envy from https://www.daz3d.com/7-deadly-sins-vanity-and-envy
with Topaz Clean applied in postwork.
Nice. I really haven't tried doing reflections in any real big way.