Showcase Showing off my new art!

Started by SilverRot December 7th, 2014 6:11 PM
  • 761 views
  • 8 replies
Female
Seen December 13th, 2014
Posted December 13th, 2014
23 posts
8.4 Years
So, I've been part of the Pony fandom for almost 4 years, but alternately I've been a pokemon fan since... 1998, when it first aired in England.

So, having drawn ponies for so long, I wanted to try something different. And BOY did I get a taste for something I loved!
I'd like to share my newest, best, and most inspiring art I've ever done.
This spurs me on to do more! Make more.
Draw something different!

Please enjoy, and don't hesitate to critique, unless you tell me how horrible it is.
:P





Kyoe

working on it

Age 27
Male
somewhere in the great wide world
Seen May 10th, 2015
Posted March 16th, 2015
265 posts
8.5 Years
Hmm, it's not bad.
The lines are a little rough, and the colours are a bit muddy, though. You should work on creating a more clear image!

Keep drawing, don't lose confidence!
Not all who wander are lost.
—————————
Kaizen | working on it | working on it

Yoshikko

the princess has awoken while the prince sleeps on

Female
Seen April 27th, 2020
Posted February 6th, 2020
3,065 posts
11.8 Years
Heyy nice compositions there! Love the water in the Kyogre pic. As Kyoe said some of the colours are a bit muddy or dull. What helps is to try avoid using actual black and white (unless absolutely necessary for pupils or highlights something) in your colours and your shading/lighting. Try to look at the environment you're putting the Pokémon in and then decide the appropriate colour for shading and lighting. If you're having a hard time deciding the right colours don't worry about looking up references or tutorials, they're all over the internet and they can be a big help. There's a lot of potential in your drawings, keep it up!

Kyoe

working on it

Age 27
Male
somewhere in the great wide world
Seen May 10th, 2015
Posted March 16th, 2015
265 posts
8.5 Years
Heh, looks like Yoshiko beat me to it...

Try visualizing where the point of light is coming in from. It really works to help you see where and how your shadows/shading should be. Since this type of art is heavily effected by lighting, it could really do wonders.
Your Kyogre looks really good in this respect, but Rayquaza for example is being hurt a bit by it.

Remember, practice, practice, practice! I'm sure you'll have drawing Pokémon down in no time! :D
Not all who wander are lost.
—————————
Kaizen | working on it | working on it

Amaruuk

└──TYPE1/BIRDTYPE2/DRAGON

Age 34
She/Her
Seen 1 Week Ago
Posted February 3rd, 2023
1,301 posts
15 Years
These are certainly a solid start! I must concur with the others in that the lighting, while pretty good particularly in the Kyogre piece, doesn't seem so consistently sourced in the other two, and light/shadow almost always has a color cast to it depending on where it is. Daylight for example has near-white but just slightly warm light, and blue in the shadows from the ambient light of the sky. All your shading and surfaces are also too smoothly graded. Look at how light affects different surfaces and how different lighting affects how sharply the transition to shadow is. Cast shadows in direct sunlight will be sharper than those under an overcast sky, for example. The part of the cast shadow closest to the object casting it is also sharpest, so the shadow under say, Seviper's head, wouldn't be blurry like that. The light from Rayquaza's beam should also be affecting it, especially places like its face which are closest to the beam. I recommend the book Light for Visual Artists if you want an excellent crash-course in everything an artist needs to understand about lighting conditions in a digestible format.

Overall, you've got a good basic understanding of constructing with form and composition, and the beginnings of lighting, you just need to keep pushing further :3




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