Writing this as I go - we'll see how it turns out. I'm trying to draw Tucker. Not shockingly, there are no online tutorials on how to do this :). I figured I'd document the process for posterity 😂 May the odds be ever in my favour.
So - Day one started with finding a photo - one that was clear enough I could see details; I particularly wanted one that showed his eyes, and ideally with perked ears, which was harder to find than expected.
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| This was my selection |
From there I had to make my sketch - that... took a while ;). Esp as I wanted it bigger than the photo actually is. But I was happy enough w what I ended up with. This is improvement over the last time I tried to sketch a dragon from an image. That did not go so well ;). Alas, at the time I had no intention of documenting this adventure, so there are no pics of the sketch on its own, although of course you can see parts of it in the pics below.
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Day 2
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So - I spent an awful lot of time with my computer working on both a black and white version of the photo (to understand values and what parts should be darker than others without the complication of colour) and with a colour version to figure out what colours are actually in his fur! More blues and reds than I would've guessed and lots of parts are far darker than I would've expected. I know how to manage that with pencil, but not really sure about with colours. 😂 we shall see...
Things I learned today:
A - partially drawn animals are creepy
B - it takes approximately 1284638274 x longer to do this than I would've expected
C - fabulous mental health win; I was fully oblivious to how many hours had passed and not at all interested in stopping
D - both artists I have paid for tutorials from have said more than once that there's always an ugly phase to coloured pencil drawings. My only hope is that I will get past that phase at some point ;)
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| Day 3 - a week later |
So I went away to the cottage for a week and poor partial Tucker was left behind. I was somewhat concerned I wouldn't remember how I got him to where he was in the first place, so I put all the pencil crayons I used in a specific case, and kept notes of at least conceptually which colours I'd used for what. This was helpful as I was able to add another layer to the part I'd done before that I'm starting to be happy with, and start trying to figure out how to do the light side of his face. Objectively typing this now looking only at the photo, it's not atrocious. But in real life, it's pretty dodgy ;). Just trust me on that one.
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| Day 4 - Starting to think I should make a flip book ;) |
The lighter ear is coming along. Still NQR, but much closer, esp in the pic version. Same with the lighter side in general really. Even less sure about how to tackle the collar or the white parts than i was about the brown fur, so I'll be making that up as I go along. Some very early layers to the collar here because I figure having that in will make it easier to do the white parts of the head. This is my theory. We shall see in reality.
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| Day 5 |
So it's a week later again since we had our lovely Quebec trip in there :). Added some basic colour to the body, a little more to the white parts of his fur, and mostly focused on the collar; I had NO idea even where to start with that, and while it's not quite done yet, I'm pleased w how it's going.
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| Day 6 |
Next layer of colour on his body, but I think I goofed on his face. TBC if I can fix that next time ;). Was trying to make the left side darker (it should be in shadow) but didn't quite get there. Also really regretting that I didn't do a background cause part's of him just disappear into the paper. Blah. Lessons learned! I LOVE how the collar is looking now.
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| Day 7 |
Maybe almost done? I feel like not quite there yet but getting close. Right so some things I like - the tail looks right now and the white on his back glows. I also think the shadow on his forehead is getting closer. I'm disappointed with the blue. I'd heard advice previously about do the background first - this I totally understand, and to be fair to me, I wasn't originally planning on a background ;) So by doing it second, resulted in some rework because all the little hairs that go out over the background needed to b e added back in. No big deal. What is a concern is that I really don't love the colour :(. And I feel like it detracts from his eyes. I wanted to do green (as though he were on grass) but had heard advice to pick colours already in the drawing or the lighting / tones / etc might not work well. So all the colours in the background are colours actually in the drawing - mostly in the blacks or darker brown sections. But it feels too much. Also the right side of his face doesn't seem dark enough yet but I'm not really sure how to fix that. Did post in the community for the artist whose lessons I've been learning from. We'll see if they come up with anything helpful :)
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| Day 8 - Calling it done :) |
There were two people in the art club that gave me really good, useful advice that helped me get this a little farther. Still a bit disappointed at the background (although it's lighter now), but otherwise pretty pleased. Had fun w details (whiskers!) and I'm surprisingly proud of the collar. Leather is not something I had learned to draw before.
So many things learned in this round:
- polarizing the original photo makes it super easy to see values (ie what needs to be darker)
- "white" fur can be surprisingly dark and made up of many colours that are not even vaguely related to white
- to darken coloured pencils, just add more layers of the same colours (you'd think this was obvious but I actually had to ask the question cause for beginner me it was not!). Many many more layers. To the point that when I pulled up the masking tape, there was a visible ridge, just like when you take the tape off a newly painted wall.
- going forward, add many more layers before blending.
- do the background first
- in a lot of ways, coloured pencil is surprisingly forgiving. Wrong colour? Add another. Too dark? Erase. Too light? Add more layers.
- something needs to go under the paper while working to protect the other papers in the book.
I can't even fathom how many hours went into this total, but even though I acknowledge it's a beginner effort, I'm still pretty proud of it. And the time just flew. So definitely starting the next project asap :). The debate is do I do a tutorial I've been interested in to learn about drawing on drafting film, or do I try another pet? We'll see....