Happy Thanksgiving to all... even Mr. Turkey gets to enjoy the day.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Thanksgiving: Diana Ting Delosh
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| Messy Animals, Frame for Pg 9, © 2008 Diana Ting Delosh, Ink & Water color art for The Woo Agency - Flash animation project. Please click HERE to view project. This is an older piece but I think it works quite well for this food-centric holiday. Animals in the throes of a Thanksgiving Feeding Frenzy! Happy Thanksgiving! Gobble! Gobble! For some less fattening but still delicious art please visit dianadelosh.com or dtdelosh.blogspot.com |
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Stephanie Ruble's Tip - Revision: Breathing New Life Into Old Art
I love creating new art, but once in a while I like to take an old piece and breathe new life into it.
When people think of revision, they usually think of text, but pictures can be revised as well. Many times the image gets revised as it goes from sketch to final, but sometimes you have a piece that just doesn’t work out, or a piece you always loved that doesn’t fit your current style. Those are prime candidates for revision.
Things to consider when revising: composition, emotion, color, character, and what the illustration is for (fun, portfolio, job, etc.).
Here's a piece I revised recently:

First Snow of the Season
What’s new: snow (instead of rain), the cat (instead of a stuffed toy moose and stuffed toy bunny), and multiple changes to the girl on the right. It’s a lot better than it was before, but not perfect. Maybe some day I’ll revise it again!
If you are interested in more recent image revisions (including the paisley whale), I showed them here. Please visit sruble.com to learn more about my art and projects, or my blog to see more recent art.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Ginger Nielson's ~ Tip for Creating a Digital File Cabinet
My solution for all those many graphics, illustrations, sketches and reference photos used to be to put them all in a steel file cabinet, or have my sketch books scattered in various places in my studio. It began to be impossible to find an exact sketch I knew I had "somewhere" so I created a digital file cabinet in my computer. Every file now has a place. I collected my scans, paintings, photos and transferred the into appropriately named folders and sub folders and put the whole batch on an external computer drive. This way I have a portable file of all my work that does not clutter up the valuable space on my computer and is safe from any unforseen crashes. A complete article explaining the how and the why is on my website if you should want to see the whole process. Creating a Digital File Cabinet
This has made my work so much easier and I know I always have a back up in addition to being able to find what I am looking for.






