thoughts. images. illustration. graphic design.

the blog companion of hopscotch graphics

12.30.2010

subtle differences


















What was originally just a grey background looks much more interesting with blues and textures scattered in and around. The slightest of texturing comes up and over the leaves themselves suggesting the shadows within a shifting leaf-filled tree environment.

12.29.2010

see da cedar

Same techniques as before (with a few new things: I intensified the colors by adding an inner shadow, and took it off the page with a bit of a drop shadow. How handy is the "X" key when switching back and forth with the hide and show while working on the mask . . .  very!



























Next, I grabbed the jpeg off of my blog and dragged it into illustrator, did a live trace with 9 colors and eliminated the lightest shadow to get this infinitely scaleable version of my drawing.

12.28.2010

sweet dreams


A little drawing of my daughter and her household's cat Clarence. He only gets to sleep this way when she is asleep; as soon as she wakes up, he's out of there.
I left some extra room at the left of the illustration for spiral binding it into a notebook. I made separate layers for all the main elements allowing  quick coloring once the ground work was layed. These little drawings have always been fun to do.

12.21.2010

snowfakes or snowflakes?



Snowflakes have 6 points or sides or whatever you want to call them, six . . . not four . . . not eight, SIX! There is endless variation from that one requirement - "no two alike". However, as a starting point, this is foundational and only forgiven when school children make four sided cutouts, because lets face it, it's harder to fold the paper in half and then in thirds, than it is to just fold it in half and then in half again before snipping commences.
Maybe not everyone has seen a real, perfect, unmelted snowflake that's just fallen and sits fragilely to be appreciated for a moment. My many years on chair lifts only produced a handful of these memories because the conditions have to be just right to see an illusive specimen. - a moment of reflective silence -


So yes, this is personal. Get it right folks; six is where it's at with snowflakes.

12.20.2010

coriander

One of our three cats, Coriander. We call him sweet and low (referring to disposition and intelligence respectively). I'm finding that I make a top layer of the line drawing only, using the select - color range capabilities in photoshop, and it brings out the detail a bit more after it's been covered up with the muted colorings.

12.16.2010

branches

This time of year I drive along and am totally distracted by the branching individuality of trees in their winter nakedness. Some just are more interesting and beautiful than others, but they are so unique that it makes me wonder at my own lack of creativity in comparison to God's.
It looked kinda barren without the green so I just inversed the selection in Photoshop and splotched in some green suggestion of leafiness - - hey its just a layer, I can do it differently at another time on a different layer if I want to.

12.11.2010

Chickadee dee dee


I guess I like birds too. We have a bird feeder right outside our front window and the chickadees are with us year round. The black capped and the chestnut backed queue up on the lilac bush to zoom in and peck around on the feeder. We used to have mountain chickadees too, but it's been a long time since I've seen any of those.
On the technical side, I'm finding that I like to do a light sketch in pencil before committing myself in ink. It leaves me freer to be spontaneous in my ink strokes, if I know that the basic proportions aren't all screwed up to begin with.

12.09.2010

midnight tree

So, now you know I like trees. The background on this one has multiple layers of the same blue, the stars created with the eraser in different opacities on different layers.

I've always liked the coloring in vintage illustrations, the blues, oranges, etc. I want to develop a color palette to use in future work. This blue seems to have the quality I'm looking for, or maybe it's the way it covers and changes the black outline.

12.07.2010

winter tree summer tree



Continuing on with the drawing-from-imagination thing I drew a little tree, and then gave it some summer leafiness with photoshop, a bit of texture to the bark (- so easy to overdo this). I really do love layers. It gives you the opportunity to try something out and just turn it off if you don't like it.

12.06.2010

button on the heating vent


A quick morning sketch of Button as she rests in comfort, covering the heating vent in the front room.

Bumped up the recovery of the scan in camera raw before coloring it in photoshop.

Ahhh, for the life of a cat!

12.05.2010

cat



I usually work from life or photos and not so much from pure imagination, so I'm trying to do a bit more in that direction. What better place to do this than at work where there is nothing to sketch besides supplies in the backroom during a break. So here's a little cat sketch scanned and then taken into illustrator to live trace, then into photoshop to color. So many options with colors and textures, how do you choose?

12.02.2010

warning, this is a rant



Two out of three "K"s and the "B" are all upside-down 
Marquee Boards with misspellings are bad, (our local Taco Time ran a "SPECAIL"  for so long a few years back, that I seriously wondered how many children in the Oregon Trail School district would spell "special" incorrectly if given a test),  but the flipped, backwards, and otherwise altered-to-fit-the-need letters drive me nuts! - and we're not even going to start on kerning issues.





I think the flipped "N" is the most common, the upside-down "K" and "B" are numerous too. Don't have an "M" handy, just flip a "W" who's going to notice, Ahhhhhhhhh! I've seen substitution of a  "5" for an "S", "1" for an "I", flipped "3" for an "E", you know what I'm talking about. I realize it is a cold and inglorious job to stand out in the public with a long pole and place plastic letters up high on a distant board, and therefore I feel certain that the personnel at the bottom of the seniority list gets stuck with this task. I also realize that the letters can be easily flipped because of the clear plastic they are printed on, BUT it speaks so publicly and poorly for the business when the immediate face it presents is a typographic mess. 


Example: Sandy's Kentucky Fried Chicken marquee sign has been up for weeks with it's special misspelled! Ironically they had to put in extra effort to get it wrong, altering a "P" into the extra "B". These companies spend millions on their national add campaigns, and then blow their image on the local level with their sloppy individual store boards. Not everyone is driven to distraction by a backwards "N", but it has just got to leave a subtle message of, "we didn't get it right and we don't care" to all who pass.

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Enough of this finger pointing though, and now for a little pause to reflect on all the typo's and misspellings that I have committed, maybe more than a little pause . . . 
Ahhhhh, that feels so much better.