Hi everybody, and welcome to my 20 page long art thread.... post comments as you wish... and don't be shy about offering critiques or saying funny things.
Enter!
kev
Hi everybody, and welcome to my 20 page long art thread.... post comments as you wish... and don't be shy about offering critiques or saying funny things.
Enter!
kev
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 22nd, 2011 at 08:04 PM.
Here's two drawings... Both began life as ink on paper, but the first one's been photoshopped, cropped, distorted and flipped. Other than that, it is exactly as I originally imagined it![]()
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 4th, 2007 at 11:47 PM.
Here's some more pen and ink stuff, first one is unpublished, second is a panel from the last book of the Dead Rider mini for DH.
Last edited by kev ferrara; March 10th, 2008 at 04:20 PM. Reason: More info.
I love the seventies comics vibe.
![]()
Tristan Elwell
**Finished Work Thread **Process Thread **Edges Tutorial
Crash Course for Artists, Illustrators, and Cartoonists, NYC, the 2013 Edition!
"Work is more fun than fun."
-John Cale
"Art is supposed to punch you in the brain, and it's supposed to stay punched."
-Marc Maron
Here's an oil painting...
Struggling with getting this to look right on screen. Lots of dust particles on the paintingand some digital weirdness happening in the conversion process...
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 4th, 2007 at 10:29 PM.
are they in cmyk when you save as jpegs? try converting to rgb and saving again, hope you get them to work, im really digging these and want to see more!
sketchbook
portfolio
tumblr
I'm a freelancer, contact me at [email protected] if you'd like to work together.
This was a pin up for the back pages of Samurai from Dark Horse.
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 4th, 2007 at 11:54 PM.
Here's two pencil caricatures of television pundits, Charles Krauthammer and Chris Matthews...
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 4th, 2007 at 11:49 PM.
nice intro you have here kev. very american![]()
Nice stuff, I really liked the two inked pics in post #4, great composition and dynamism in those. The oils look great too!
Welcome to the boards and post some more!![]()
sweeet stuff man. welcome! im particularly fond of your ink work. really beautiful examples of how its done.-c36
Just did these in the last two weeks from the model. About an hour and a half on each. A totally exhausting sprint and not enough time to finish! Digital photos don't quite look right either, but you get the idea. (whine, whine, whine...)
Thanks to everybody who's commented so far!
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 4th, 2007 at 11:31 PM.
Your ink work has that great 'classic' look to it. Love it.
The rushed paintings look great too.
my sketches here... http://conceptart.org/forums/showthread.php?t=92997
www.sevans.co.nz , visit them or a puppy dies!
wonderfull work, the ink drawings are strong and dynamic!
One critique would be that sometimes there is too much "dynamics" so the eye just swooshes back and forth.
just my two cents
cheers
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oh shit...those inks are beautiful.
Nice! Echoes of a lot of my favorites in there _ Frazetta, Wrightson, and Ploog.
Check my sketchbook if you're bored![]()
http://www.conceptart.org/forums/showthread.php?t=76696
And my blog!
http://spudstudios.blogspot.com/
Lot's of Wrightson and Frazeta ,Love it ! Thanks for showing.
When I was young, I could do all-nighters in my sleep.
Hey Kevin. Nice to see more work from you. Excellent stuff. I love all the linework. The oil painting looks great as well even if its a bad scan.
-Eric
(I'll be at life drawing tonight if you are considering going)
Here's a page from the Dead Rider.
Yes, the background and pen and ink drawn frame is going to be on every page. I did this to unify all the pages, many of which have various different techniques on it that are pretty wide apart, stylistically. And also because I wanted to have a mid value behind everything which would let the panels have both the darkest and the lightest values on the pages - so I can do more with lighting effects and such (like the bright sun here) Also the mid value backdrop allows me to control where the starkest contrasts appear (effect areas) in each panel so I can better direct the reader's attention to the essential dramatic point of each moment. And also, of course, the sepia color recalls the dusty landscape out west and all that.
I'm doing all the lettering and balloons too and they are all stylized and color coded according to who is speaking and they add more color and pop where now there is a lot of the sepia tone. I did the Dead Rider logo too. (Yeah, you guessed it, I'm a graphic designer in another life. I'm in the process of converting from The Deadlander (which Legal has asked me to forgo) which was converted from the Badlander (which Legal has asked me to forgo) to Dead Rider. )
By the way, I drew only one side of the pen and ink frame and duplicated the other side in photoshop. The texture of the sepia tone is an old piece of construction paper scanned in. Maybe that's obvious. Anyway...
Last edited by kev ferrara; March 10th, 2008 at 04:21 PM.
Here's some more drawings, this time from the model. 10 minute poses. Pencil and Ink Wash (except for the last one which is just pencil).
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 5th, 2007 at 02:18 PM.
Here's more illos from the Deadlander, I think both are ink and brush rather than pen. The first is from issue 1, page 13 of so. The second is the frontispiece/inside front cover for the whole series. Next time I see Berni, I owe him five bucks!![]()
Last edited by kev ferrara; August 2nd, 2007 at 08:44 PM.
Damn! Damn! Damn!
Keep posting and I'll keep looking. Love the work.
my sketches here... http://conceptart.org/forums/showthread.php?t=92997
www.sevans.co.nz , visit them or a puppy dies!
Thanks everybody! I'll post more later or tomorrow!
kev
amazing style!
I really like you your figure paintings and darwings. they really are beautiful.
keep up the great work
slainte!
Here's a WIP from a sorta experimental sequence from The Dead Rider issue 3. The main character Jacob runs into a coffinmaker's shop to hide from the Cavalry. As he enters, the art turns from fully inked to just pencilled (see panel 1) until he busts out.
I was all ready to ink the pages as usual until I was struck with the notion that they were fine the way they are and would make the sequence more interesting and moody as just shadowy pencils. Also I decided I would ruin them if I tried to achieve the same effects using pen, brush and ink linework.
I dropped a multi-colored texture over the whole indoor sequence and in the nebulous areas of the panels where detail gets lost you can see pink and blue and green blotches, which is a sort of colorful way of representing what your eyes might see when you can't make anything out in near-darkness.
Anyhow, if anybody has comments, please post! Thanks...
Kev
Last edited by kev ferrara; March 10th, 2008 at 04:22 PM.
Here's a pen and ink panel from a sequence from issue 4. I'm not done with this part of the project so it might all change and this picture might be sent packing. Anyhow, here it is...
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 6th, 2007 at 10:23 AM.
Man, i like your color art, but the black and white is really something weird!! You got a great talent with inks... Do you use brushes?
Max, thanks for the compliment.
Yes I use a brush (Windsor Newton series 7 sable 1,2 and sometimes 3) on a lot of my ink work. And various pen nibs (hunt 22s, drawing nibs, nothing too thick, not the teeny tiny kinds and not penmanship/calligraphy nibs). It really depends on what I'm feeling like and what the picture calls for and whether my brushes are "working" that day or not. Or if the piece of paper I sketched the drawing on has too much watercolor paper-type "tooth" I can't use pen on it because the lines will etch/scratch into the surface and the ink lines will seep, bleed and spread, etc, which is not good for fine work. (Although I bet the seeping lines can be a cool effect on something more Dulac-esque, using sepia or light gray ink for instance.)
The brush has so much more versatility but is much harder to control. When I have the brush working and I can draw with it and do cross hatching and the fine linework I love so much, you won't see me use anything else.
The pen is a much more intellectual instrument, not nearly as expressive (unless you exert 40 pounds of pressure per square inch on it.) and when the point sticks into the paper it's like scratching your fingernails across a backboard. It also blobs up sometimes and the nibs get crudded up quick. And if the instrument isn't easy to use, forget it. The work's going to come out labored looking because you are struggling with crummy tools.
The pen is also harder to make "fresh" because the strokes accumulate and start to dirty up the page. And if your hand shakes its like a seismograph needle. You can see every little tremor. When I'm doing some fine work and I feel my hand about to shake, I'll extemporaneously design into the line a place where I can pirouette or dance the nib on purpose, so at least I will remain in control of the design.
Any false move makes the pen line look indecisive, like I'm searching for the right lines and guessing about the edges and forms. Art greatly suffers from a lack of conviction in any part of it.
Pen also tends to work best for outlining, which flattens forms. In order to use it in a more painterly fashion, I have to think of the drawing more like a painter, which means doing a lot more form drawing and light thought.
Whereas with the brush, it's so much easier to create a silhouetted edge with one sweep and thus begin to establish the form of an object.
The big thing is decisiveness and integrity shows right through the strokes. It can't be faked or hidden under the carpet, no matter what the medium. One sure stroke does the work of forty indecisive ones, except much better!
Aristotle in Poetics says, use nothing more than is needed and nothing less. If one stroke says it all, why waste people's time with two? (or forty two for that matter!)
Anyhow, the real secret to inking for me was gleaned from Harvey Dunn's great lecture notes from 1934. Essentially the advice was not to think about the brush strokes, whether its pen or brush, ink, oil, crayon or pastels. The real secret to inking, wood for instance, is to "think wood". Don't think pen strokes, or "how would my favorite artist do this". But imagine you are drawing the real thing and interpret "wood" through the implement you're holding and the medium it broadcasts. See through the technique to what is actually important; the drawing and design and the spirit of the thing.
Hope this helps (for those pen and inkers out there who are interested...)
Best,
Kev
P.S. I took a look at your site, Max... Nice Pro Stuff!! Really fine work. Congratulations!
Last edited by kev ferrara; July 6th, 2007 at 05:26 PM.
Here's another panel from the Dead Rider. Done in Pencil and Photoshop.
Just found the original pencil drawing, added to the post...
(This is from issue 1, which was titled Deadlander.)
kev
Last edited by kev ferrara; March 10th, 2008 at 04:23 PM.
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