Great work, as always Justin…..I was wondering about the turn of the lizards main form or his body turn. It seems to have given the work a whole different feel…..like from offense to defense. Is it just me, or was that a factor or just mainly a design and flow problem/solution? Maybe reading too much into it, but just wondering. And thanks for posting the process shots….amazing for sure. thanks.
Wow, this is great! I really admire the fluidity that you maintained throughout the completion of the piece. And if you hadn't said “digital” at first I would have sworn this was traditional! That's what I love about digital tools these days – they have such an inherent painterly quality when used well. Thanks for sharing these progress pics! -Will
I'm always amazed by pieces with an inherent sense of movement about them. My own work is always very tight and controlled and I have a hard time breaking out of that approach.
been following your work since i was a wee lad. the general audiences will boo this comment i'm sure, but imho, Sweet>Frazetta.
mind, this is an opinion, or fiery members of the fantastic four, but flame on anyway.
i only mention this to combat the first comment, which was all… “you're style is an underthing not comparing to frazzetas”, whereas i totally see others in their relationship to you.
David PalumboonGlaze 2.0This new version claims to have less artifacts, which I'm interested to try out. The program is slow if you run it from the cpu, but if you download t…
David PalumboonGlaze 2.0not exactly. It alters the image in a way that doesn't look very different to us, but is very confusing for training models. To say it adds static imp…
Robert CosgroveonThe 2024 Society of Illustrators Hall of FameVery pleased to learn of Greg Manchess's induction into the Hall of Fame. Still lusting for a high production retrospective collection of his work, ho…
Looks good … its hard to improve on Frazetta though.
Jeff
give something like like a feeling i found in frazetta's works 🙂 .
Great work, as always Justin…..I was wondering about the turn of the lizards main form or his body turn. It seems to have given the work a whole different feel…..like from offense to defense. Is it just me, or was that a factor or just mainly a design and flow problem/solution? Maybe reading too much into it, but just wondering.
And thanks for posting the process shots….amazing for sure. thanks.
This is really cool. I've had a hard time breaking out of the habit of doing very tight drawings before painting over them.
Wow, this is great! I really admire the fluidity that you maintained throughout the completion of the piece. And if you hadn't said “digital” at first I would have sworn this was traditional! That's what I love about digital tools these days – they have such an inherent painterly quality when used well. Thanks for sharing these progress pics!
-Will
“Looks like meat is back on the menu Boys!”
Thanks justin for showing your progression on this painting…
I've been trying to work loosly lately, just to get some ideas down,
and needed to see someone elses approach.
~Mike
I'm always amazed by pieces with an inherent sense of movement about them. My own work is always very tight and controlled and I have a hard time breaking out of that approach.
Thanks for the process shots!
been following your work since i was a wee lad. the general audiences will boo this comment i'm sure, but imho, Sweet>Frazetta.
mind, this is an opinion, or fiery members of the fantastic four, but flame on anyway.
i only mention this to combat the first comment, which was all… “you're style is an underthing not comparing to frazzetas”, whereas i totally see others in their relationship to you.
I go to the “oil pastel” more than any other brush in Painter. It's so versatile.
Thanks for taking the time to share. Inspiring.
~ Tim