Archive for October, 2009

SuperBland Man

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

The Awesome liberation of aspirations.
I dont have to be it, just aspire.

Right now im stuck in the novelty of regarding the legacy of the really good try-er. Those of us destined to be remembered along the lines of, ‘insert name here, gave it his/her all, they really tried’. In celebration of the average joe I drew, Super Bland man, a throw back to the days when all i did was draw super heros with incredible powers that could save the world and look cool while doing.

Super Bland Man

SuperBland Man, Mild on Crime, more of an ember than a fire.

white Hair

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

white Hair

She wore a polka-dot hat.

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

polkadot Hat 00

the Train sat in the station for a while. Polka-dot hat was engrossed in Black-berryism, and stayed still for a while. Thanks Polka-dot. Mid way through the trip, the train was flooded with 2nd or 3rd graders from PS something or another. The train went from calm and quite and kind of empty to a ruckus sea of chest high heads bobbing up and down, bouncing off the trains inner obstacles, passengers, rails, protruding seats, like rocks at the bottom of a waterfall, all were brought in to contact via haphazard collision courses, plotted by an odd combination of fate and youthful negotiations with gravity, friction and miscalculated forces.

polkadotHat01

No seats left unoccupied, some even filled beyond their intended capacity. There were no less the 6 bodies crammed in to the four seats next to me. Even polka-dot hat was mobbed having to shift herself slightly to accommodate her new seat mate (seen out of scale left of polka-dot hat; she got obfuscates quickly by an over bearing very nervous teacher). Shortly after sitting the boy right next to me noticed the drawing and began an epic series of, secret gestures aimed at gaining the attention of his cohorts without alerting me to his actions. I had forgotten how awesome it is to watch children thinking they are being clever. High espionage in progress, the whisper, a dull roar. The hand gesture subtly signaling his team, like an over animated conductor in the final throws of the Ode to Joy. Miss Morris, Miss Morris, I want to be an artist when i grow up, said one. I remember when experiences would solidify my future plans, and like all children of his age it was set… for about 3 minutes until socializing with his crew took over again and all else paled in comparative importance.

Turn around Bright eyes

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

look Up

Fail, back to the mini me.

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Tried to paint this outlined used in the Scan to vector posts, it did not work out well. So instead of leaving a half dead piece it seemed a better idea to document it then destroy it further, thus jsut leaving a corps instead of a wounded beast. It was one of those days that would have been better served staying home.

Ive watched enough Seinfeld to know that i have Costanza Syndrome, and i dont know when to leave on a hi note. The winter coming on as it is, there will be few opportunities to paint anything of length due to short days and cold weather. So instead of quitting while ahead i decide itd be good to paint something really horrible to leave a nice sorrow taste in my moth all winter. Theres nothing like agonizing over something you cant affect for 4 months.

wounded beast:

wounded

corps:

deadCorps

remember the little people:

Mini Me

Illustrator: Scan to vector – Part #2

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Part #1 here.

PART #2:

With ALL THE BASE Shapes created its time to start combining them to form more complex shapes Using mainly the Pathfinder Palette.

starting point:

nyStateOfGrind01

Ending point:

nyStateOfGrind03

Step 1:

Isolate the letters and plan the over laps; this can be tricky, as done in the wrong order you can end up combing or trimming unintended shapes. Luckily with ‘undo’ you can go back and or fix later with some more pathfider work or using the scissor tool to dissect some shapes again.

r-00

Isolated the main the body of the R and the two extensions that connect to the R body.
The top extension the comes out of the left top arm pit of the R; Since the extension needs to connect to the R and have it s chute  pass behind it, I selected both pieces and Trimmed them to remove the overlapping area of the extension. Because the resulting shapes all share a border I couldnt use the Combine function on the pathfinder so I used the scissor  tool to snip both the extension end and the arm pit. Deleting the end of the extension and separating the Arm pit points, i then selected the corresponding open points and joined them.

r-01

Fill turned of you can see no overlapping outlines.

r-03

Similar process to get the Left foot of the R and its kick extension squared away. It also involved some negotiating and trimming its over lap with the Rs main body.

r-04

The completed R with only the top left extension un-trimmed. Added the negitave space of the R creating a Compound path so the shape will fill keep the negative space empty.

r-05

Close too finished base letters, with top left extension and A sliced un-Trimmed, also the bottom Left leg of the H is yet unconnected to the heart. And the negative spaces in the heat of the T and the A need to be added.

nyStateOfGrind02

Black Berry User

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Black Berry User

Illustrator: Scan to vector – Part #1

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

How i go about translating an scanned sketch into an Illustrator Drawing.

When i first started using illustrator I went about painstakingly trying to trace pretty complex images, not concerned with Illustrators most powerful feature, which is to create complexity by building from simplicity. Just like books aimed at teaching you how to draw illustrator is great when used to block and refine. Towards this end illustrator has an awesome set of drawing tools to help build generic shapes that can be combined with another tool (the PathFinder Tool; more about this one later)

Resources:
if you’re not familiar with the pen tool check out these links: http://school.tatoland.com/illustrator/aipentool.html & http://vector.tutsplus.com/tools-tips/illustrators-pen-tool-the-comprehensive-guide/

STEP #1:

nyStateOfGrind00

Scanned Drawing, opened in Illustrator. I set the transparency to 20% to help differentiate the vector shaped from the scanned sketch. I always set my scan on its own layer and LOCK the layer so it wont accidentally get moved. I have accidentally moved a scan before and continued drawing with old layers turned off and didn’t realize the new lines were shifted until sometime later, it was a bit of a pain to get them re-registered. All subsequent illustrator work will take place on new layers sitting above the scan layer. Its a pain but if you are going to work on a file for a while of set it down and come back to it, naming layers is super helpful to help keep track of what is where.

STEP #2:

nyStateOfGrind00a

Start to block out the basic shapes. I used the pen tool for this. I am not a fan of the pencil to when it comes to drawing these kinds of precise lines and curves . The pen tool also allows for better control of the number and positioning of anchor points. When drawing with teh pen tol i always turn the fill off and set the stroke to an arbitrary color the will not be confused with the scan I’m tracing.

nyStateOfGrind00c

If youre the kind of person who draws over-lapping letters with out thinking about what goes on behind the over-lap, now is the time to consider it. Closing your eyes only blocks your view of the world it doesnt make it go away; the same goes for the parts of letters that are behind the over-lap. This method of working in illustrator will allow me to combine all these simple looking shapes into much more sophisticated and complex shapes, that would be the wrong use of energy to simply draw out with the pen tool. Once all the shapes are blocked in you can then playing around with the bits, and where and how they sit in relation to each other; something that becomes Sisyphean if done on paper.

nyStateOfGrind00e

nyStateOfGrind00g

nyStateOfGrind00i

nyStateOfGrind00j

nyStateOfGrind00k

nyStateOfGrind00l

nyStateOfGrind00n

nyStateOfGrind00o

I have purposely left out the negative spaces of the letter, they will be added later when the shaped are combined. Also the Arrows will be created separately and then copied and added to each branch.

nyStateOfGrind00p

All the basic shapes are drawn. I set the fill back to the default white and black so i can see the solid shapes and begin any initial adjustments to where the basic shapes will sit.

nyStateOfGrind00q

Next post:

pathFinder Palette and using it to manipulate the simple shapes and turn them into  shapes that more resemble the finished letters of the sketch.

Standing Reader

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

standing Reader

standing Reader 01

lessons from the Kane, Big Daddy.

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

new Magic Vector boring

Many times when i get excited about something, i cant wait to do a proper set up and create a well thought out thing, i just want to jump right in and get it going. While this gets you to the part you want to do most faster then normal it also gets you there with a fairly crappy thing, and the thing about polishing a turd is its still a turn at the end of the day high gloss or matte. SO in my mind i have a illustration i want to do, but refuse to start at the proper starting point, thus its not getting done… Starting from the start is similar to the way Big Daddy Kane explains pimpin hoes, ‘it aint easy, but it sure is necessary’