Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Nobody Nose

I'm a sucker for a good pun, I guess.

This is a post about drawing noses. Because it is not an easy thing to do. And yet, also, quite easy. I dunno how to say that in a way that sounds smart. Let's just look at some examples of artists drawing noses, then look at how I draw them. Because I'm gonna predict that I do not have a consistent way of doing it. Which... is fine, I think. Art is feels, not accuracy.

Most artists tend to draw female noses differently than male ones. I guess because they want to ladies to have "pretty" noses, so they reign in their wilder cartooning habits for something more modest.

Here's a bit of Sergio Aragonés. I thought this was a nice little capsule of noses. See how each character has a completely different looking nose? Aragonés is a master of cartooning and he really tries to give each character a look of their own. Notice how Groo's granny here has a nose just like Groo's.


But when Aragonés wants to draw the pretty girls, he switches gears too.

Abe Snake, artist of the adult comic Muffin Topp, draws very cute little noses on his ladies too, often just a curved line pointing up.

But here are some male characters from Muffin Topp.

Comic artist Rune Ryberg opts for a little curved line pointing down on many of his females.


Here's a scene from a Ryberg comic showing men and women together. The female noses are slightly smaller, on average, but the size difference here is not very noticeable.


Vaughn Bodé liked to suggest a female nose, often in different ways. There are far fewer examples of his male noses on human characters because so many of his characters are lizards, robots, and weirdos.

And here are a few other artists working in styles that I like.


The classic pinup style female nose is small, usually upturned, and just not very prominent. It is there, but not dominant.

Yet many women have big honkers. What about cartoonists who draw more prominent noses on their women as well as their men? Now, I think in the above example you can see that William Skaar's treatment of noses on his female characters is kinda cool and interesting. He doesn't give them tiny, upturned noses. Their honkers are more pronounced. I like that. It's a different vibe.


An assortment of cartoonists leads to an assortment of noses.


Noses can be almost any shape. No wait, fuck that. Noses can be any shape. Whatever you want to draw. If you want to draw a ridiculous little square for every nose on every character, you can do that. Because this is art. There are no rules.

Yet we don't just draw squares for noses, usually. We want to express something. And it won't always be satisfied with a little square. We experiment, doodle, and screw around with it until we draw a nose we think looks about right. Then maybe we draw a lot of noses like that as we move forward into our journey.

Here are some noses from my own art. I don't have a standard style for noses. I go with what feels right. My noses have changed over the years, though. I used to try to draw them realistically when I was young, then I shifted to something more cartoony. I'm still searching for noses.





 

Saturday, October 16, 2021

Intuos 4 Love Bomb

In 2009 the Intuos 4 graphics tablet was released to the masses and I got one. It was my second tablet after starting with a small Bamboo. Since 2009 I have used two tablets: the Intuos 4 and an XP-Pen Artist 16 pen display tablet. My experience with the XP-Pen is shitty. The hardware was OK but the drivers... holy shit they were terrible. Constantly crashing, freezing, losing pressure sensitivity, etc.

After using the XP-Pen for less than 6 months I said fuck this piece of shit and I dug out my trusty Intuos 4. It felt like an old friend returned to me in a time of need. This tablet is a god damn workhorse. I have used it for a solid decade to create almost every piece of art you've seen from me during that time and it shows no signs of slowing down. No dead spots that I can detect, the pen is absolutely pristine, no worries at all. I assume the buttons on the side still work but honestly I'm a keyboard guy so I don't even touch those buttons. I have my work habits and I'm a bit unwilling to change. Insert old man yells at cloud meme here.

The Intuos 4 never crashes. It works seamlessly with my ancient machine. Losing pressure sensitivity is extremely rare and seems to be more related to my drawing software than the tablet. And look at those nibs! They are all in perfect condition. Hell, I have used the same nib on this damn thing for years at a stretch. I mean... they don't really wear down, do they? If your nibs wear down maybe you're murdering your tablet?? Ease up.

Anyway. Love my tablet. I will eventually upgrade, probably when this machine finally chokes up its last gasp. But for now we're good.



Saturday, July 17, 2021

More Clip Studio

Just sharing some of the rough doodles I did in Clip Studio Paint. If you're wondering why I'm talking about this at all you have to understand that I've been using Photoshop 7 ever since it came out. That's like almost 20 fucking years. If it ain't broke...

So I recently started messing with Clip because the software has gotten better and I had the desire to do more painting. Now, my biggest drawback is that I'm still rocking the same computer I've had for many moons. I'm kind of a creature of habit, you see. So far the limitations of this machine haven't exceeded my patience and well... if it ain't broke...

I do hope to get a new machine at some point. But not now.

Anyway. Sketches below were done with various brushes, mostly from the Frenden pack. Which is aweome. Fave brush so far is Consistent Carl because it's just god damn consistent.





Sunday, July 11, 2021

Clip Studio

I have been using the same drawing software for... oh my god... when did Photoshop 6 come out? I used it, then got PS 7 when it was out and I've been using PS 7 ever since. Looks like version 8 (CS) started in 2003. So I've been using PS 7 since probably 2001. Now, I haven't been drawing digitally that long. I was using it to color and clean up scans prior to 2008 when I started using a drawing tablet.

Currently I'm testing out Clip Studio Paint. I messed around with Krita and Gimp and a few others but never "used them" to any real degree. But Clip is nice. So far I'm kind of loving it.




Thursday, October 15, 2020

Krita vs. Photoshop (7) AGAIN

I installed the latest version of Krita and tried it out again now that I'm back on the Intuos 4. Naturally, it's awesome. Lots of great brushes. The way you can rotate canvas so easily is super cool. I know that rotating my canvas in PS7 is fuckin' stupid slow.

But dammit I just have so much creative energy invested in my PS7 setup. And it's fast. Like... my pen strokes in Krita have lag. I hate that. But when I do a stroke in Photoshop it's instantaneous. Feels very natural. So I guess I won't be budging from my digital grognard stance. I will continue to use a massively outdated drawing program on a massively outdated computer until it dies or I do.

In other news, I've been noodling some comic book ideas. Been a long god damn time since I did a proper comic. I might have mentioned it here before... but comics are a lot of work. Like, a metric shit ton. If you know a comics artist who actually does the work, kiss 'em. They deserve it.

Here's a rat man drawn rapidly in PS7 for shits and giggles.



Friday, October 9, 2020

Not-Inktober + Life Size Life

What is going on, you ask?

I made a pathetic attempt at Inktober, but quickly abandoned the foolish idea. I did the entire month 2 years ago and that was fun and timely. But last October I was neck-deep in Supercalla and my mom's declining health and this year my spirit is just not in it. I'm busy with GOZR and just surviving.


To be honest, I'm in a lull. I get this way from time to time and it sucks but it's just part of my artistic journey. It happens. I get in the lull generally on the heels of some creative high - probably completing Cozmic Metal Heads. Then I eventually come out of it and hit some new creative high. And that's fine with me as long as I keep creating. That's really all I care about, as an artist. I want to keep working. I'm happiest when I'm creating. Games, comics, random drawings... doesn't matter.

And that's the most urgent thing I would tell any creator who is struggling with any aspect of creativity. Just keep doing it. It is the act of creation that matters more than anything. You can dream about creating, and that is fun and rewarding. You can look back fondly on what you created, and that is also fun and rewarding. But nothing compares to the pleasure of being in the act of creation. Especially if you have confidence and faith in the thing you're doing.

That's probably my biggest weakness. I lack faith in my own work. I find comfort and strength in peoples' comments, though they are rare. It is lonely work doing this stuff. Any signal that I'm reaching someone is like fresh air, a cold drink, or a hot meal.

Bit of a rambly post but it's on my mind and I wanted to share it. Now I'm off to noodle about a new game idea. But aren't you working on GOZR?? Yes... but there's room for other ideas to germinate. I love having multiple ideas cooking at once. Though... if I'm honest... I'd prefer to have 100% focus on one thing at a time. Just not in the cards for me, I'm afraid.

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Dwarf Wants the Key

A random sketch. I like to think the dwarf is standing in the lap of this huge guy.


Monday, October 21, 2019

Sunday, August 18, 2019

The Hole in the Oak Adventure Module

The Hole in the Oak, an official adventure module for Old School Essentialsis now available at DriveThruRPG. I illustrated this adventure, which was written by Gavin Norman and published by his imprint Necrotic Gnome.

A hole in an old oak tree leads characters down to
a maze of twisting, root-riddled passageways, the
chambers of an ancient wizard-complex, and the
banks of an underground river where once a reptile
cult built their temples.

A classic dungeon adventure for characters of 1st to
2nd level

Babies. They're going to get you.