Quick CS5 painting from what I remembered seeing the other morning. Pre-dawn fog featuring a streetlight.
styofa doing anything

Andulka
Monterey Bay Aquarium
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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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Today's Document
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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seen from Chile
seen from Argentina
seen from Pakistan

seen from Thailand
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from India
seen from Japan

seen from United Kingdom
@devussie-draws
Quick CS5 painting from what I remembered seeing the other morning. Pre-dawn fog featuring a streetlight.
Whoops! It’s been a while. Here’s an ammonite that was purchased from a tourist trap in Utah. My first real foray into watercolor pencils.
I’ve been watching this video today, one of many, many quality videos by Sycra, and I’m feeling kind of pissed off that I didn’t learn this sooner.
I mean, sure, I “learned” this in art school, but I didn’t really get the “analyzing” part of it. It was basically “keep drawing and exploring solutions” but somehow to me that never meant to look critically at every drawing and focus on improving specific things. My approach was always more “cast a wide net and maybe you’ll get lucky and run across something that works/makes the teacher happy”.
I see so much advice given (especially to artists who are looking to improve) that they should always “draw more”, but hey, that’s really not that helpful on its own. It’s easier to improve if you explore the ways that things DON’T work so that you can understand when they DO work.
He’s got interesting things to say about using references too, and the way I’ve been using references could certainly be better (see: this blog). I want to use them as a shortcut to a finished drawing that I think looks good, whether or not I really learned a lot from just copying the reference.
So, I’m going to trying to work more on “iterative drawings” instead of being lazy and relying on so many references. Expect to see fewer polished works here in the future!
Continuing the Pokemon theme, here’s a Flareon painting I never quite got around to finishing. Whoops!
I had fun with Pokemon fusions! This is Magnemite and Seaking, obvs.
Reference from a Ghibli film screenshot, I think it was Howl’s Moving Castle? 30 minutes in PS CS4
Value studies from various fine art sources, cause who knows values better than those folks?!
The time range on these was basically “until it’s done” while trying not to get too involved in details
Painting from reference photo, 60 minutes in PS CS4
Skintones are hard :(
Painting from reference, 20 minutes in PS CS4
Landscape from a photo ref. I like landscapes!
MAN THAT CEZANNE GUY REALLY KNEW STUFF ABOUT COLOR
By trying to copy one of his paintings, I hoped that I TOO COULD LEARN THINGS ABOUT COLOR
Older speed paintings from various references, each completed in 15 minutes.