This little guy is a carbuncle: a lizard about five inches long when he’s not all curled up. He has a gemstone inside his head that, if extracted and correctly processed can be used to create a potion that grants the imbiber... I dunno, eternal life, or the ability to perceive the essential nature of reality, or something like that. Removing the gem kills the carbuncle, so this one is having a little quiet time sitting on his own belly, ‘cuz poachers got most of his family.
Wow: this one looked so much better as a pencil sketch than it does on screen. Especially that hind leg, jeez.
I start livestreaming, and what's the first thing I do?
Make a banner for my Livestream, of course. Eyup.
Still streaming!
Concept art for June and Jove, characters for a sci-fi comic. Same setting as James, but different storyline.
AI's use virtual appearances for things like video-calls and AR appearances. To make themselves instantly identifiable as AI's, but easy to relate to as people, they use appearances that are lifelike, yet unfeasible or "impossible."
The most standard element of this is to use a hybrid of animal species for a base appearance: June's a combination of rat and eland, while Jove is a mix of cat and dog. June's rigid gauntlets and boots don't cover the joints (knees and elbows, that is), which is a normally an important consideration. Jove's spandex tights... well, most spacers in this setting wouldn't be caught dead wearing something so flamboyant.
These aren't quite final designs... I'm still deciding on how to mix the features. And I'll probably be giving June a tail.
I need to work on those horns, too.
I got an early Christmas present... a set of charcoal pencils and sticks, and a pad of paper suitable for them. Lucked out really: charcoal was the last thing on my list of things to play around with that I hadn't yet acquired the materials for. Pretty well the only thing missing was a tortillion, of which I already had a few.
I spent an afternoon playing around, getting a feel for them, but this is the first drawing I've taken the time to sit down and put some effort into.
The process was pretty straight forward: I sketched the figure with an HB charcoal pencil, then darkened the lines and filled in the shade with a 4B. After that, it was a steady cycle of blending with a tortillion, lightening patches with a light application of 4mm eraser stick or kneaded eraser, laying down more charcoal where needed, and back to blending again. Wash, rinse, repeat.
Man, I love this stuff! It's much better for heavy shade than graphite, and it doesn't make as much of a mess as I thought it would. Charcoal doesn't compare to india ink for pure, solid black, I don't think anything could, but the charcoal is so much more workable. I don't mind the time and effort it takes to build up a ton of hatching with a nib pen, but all you can do is build up. Being able to lay down, blend, and erase charcoal was an utter delight.
I might do a few more pages of that steampunk comic I worked on a while back, just for something to do in charcoal.
Sketch of a heavily-armoured gauntlet for Galen. I liked how it came out, so I inked and coloured it.
You know you're in a rough line of work when the dress code includes reactive armour plating.
For Jasper, my OC, I chose a specific breed: Irish Sport Horse, aka Irish Hunter. I'd consider that the equivalent of picking a race.
This was very closely related to his personality and character concept, not to mention his physical build and appearance (though, I didn't realize until later that I'd made him Irish and gave him a green coat).
His swooshy forelock was inspired by Superman's iconic curl of hair. I wanted give him a sort of hunky-dreamy sort of look. The ponytail and black ribbon bow was inspired by 18th-century hairstyles (Think Will Turner or Lieutennant Norrington from Pirates of the Caribbean).
I actually did draw Jasper as a human at one point... I really should dig that pic up, I liked how it came out.
I’m just wondering, do you people with like pony characters make up the specific way your character would look if it was a human- like hair styles, race, etc.
I mean like
do you decide on the race your characters
do you decide on the body type
i mean whut.
First real piece of MLP fan art I've done.
Ideas are like demons. They can't be ignored, and they can't be destroyed. The only way to get rid of them is to exorcise them. In my case, by drawing.
I don't know why people picture muses as smexy babes in flimsy drapery.
So it's my birthday. I drew myself a gift for it.
It's lazy, but I feel like being lazy right now. No jubilant celebrations or anything, just a quiet day to myself.
An Icosahedron. A while back, I figured out a nifty trick for drawing them at any angle whatsoever, and even in perspective.
Hatched it for penmanship practice. Nice little refresher exercise.
INFP... INFP... Luna-? Sweet!
bringing this back
http://16typequiz.com/quiz.html
find your results and tell me what pony you are
I’m Luna~