The Best Blog Titlerino
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Making a Shoe Ad
Being not the first project in Illustrator anymore but still earlier in my use of it there were still some difficulties. After setting the initial shapes for the shoe it took a while to make sure that there were no gaps. This took a lot of finagling to make it still look good while also being solid. By contrast an easy part of the project was adding the stitching onto the shoe, all this required was to select the dashed line option and to draw a line where it was needed.
The objective of the project this time was to learn and use the gradient tool, this was used to make basically the whole body of the shoe. How it worked was we would need to make closed shapes with the pen tool and turning on fill with color using the gradient tool created the gradient effects visible in the above image of the shoe. All that aside I would still change a few things, one of these would be to use more layers when setting up shapes. When making the shoe off of an original image the work I did sometimes made it hard to see for later shapes, with more layers I could just switch them off and have a easier time.
Cartoon of Me
For our first real project in Adobe Illustrator we had to create a cartoon of ourselves. How the project worked was using pencil and paper we would draw ourselves to use later as a model, afterwards we would take this and create an outline in illustrator. Once the outline was complete we would transfer it to photoshop where it was colored, shaded, and completed. All and all I think that my project turned out well enough, having both its stronger and weaker points. Picking the strongest aspect of the piece would definitely be the very general outline of the body I made in Illustrator. The proportions of the body are reminiscent of actual proportions and they don’t have too many rough edges like in real life. On the other hand in the fine details I more or less failed. Observing the claw like hands and the right elbow it just does not seem to fit negatively impacting the work.
Being the first project we’ve had in Illustrator some new difficulties were attached, also with photoshop being involved there was a familiar easy part of the project. In Illustrator using the pen tool for the first time to get decent lines for the outline of the project entailed a large amount of trial and error and redos making all around the most difficult part of the project. The easiest part of the project was, like said earlier, was in photoshop. To get the initial color of the cartoon all I needed to do was select a color and paint it where needed which did not take much effort or time making it very easy.
The objective of the project this time was to learn and utilize the pen tool, select tool, and direct select tool. The pen tool was used to create the lines observable in the cartoon , making the skeleton of the work almost. The select tool of the three was used the least but was still used. When I wanted to move the outline of the pen tool to get a better look at anything or anything else there it was. The direct select tool was heavily used. When I drew a line with the pen tool afterward I would use the direct select tool to select a segment and move it to the proper place to look good. Even though I think the cartoon turned out alright I would change a few things. The first change I would make are the detail errors I talked of earlier such as on the hands and arms.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Hybrid Animal
For our third to last project this year in Elements of Design we had to take parts from three animals and combine them into one new animal fusion. The new creature would have to look realistic, having well blended parts that fit and transition naturally, but could also combine animals that would immediately make a person question it due to odd part arrangements. For the project we were introduced to two new tools in photoshop, the stamp and healing brush tools. It was our objective to use these two tools to make the fusion look realistic. When it came to the stamp tool it was used often. In order for me to transplant the red panda head in the image onto the bird for example and do it accurately I would get the stamp from the panda image and on a new layer paint it on where it could blend realistically. I would go onto to do the same for some fur/feather blending and putting sloth claws where the bird feet were. For the healing brush tool it was useful in altering the original bird image, which served as the base for the whole work, to accommodate new animal parts. An example of this would be getting rid of the original bird feet by replacing it with painted on wood so the new claws would fit and doing touch ups on the fur.
The objective isn't the only part of the project. I had some strong aspects such as how well I used the healing brush. In getting rid of the wood the product looked realistic which was a good base for the new animal to sit on. A weaker aspect would probably be the job I did blending, in some areas it's easy enough to tell that parts are not of the same image such as the neck and lower claws. I should probably have focused more in those areas.
Like every other project of the year some parts of the project were easier than others. The easiest part was definitely transplanting the head of the panda onto the bird, all it too was to properly size both images then carefully use the stamp too on the panda head and start painting in the same spot on the bird. The hardest part by contrast would have been using both the stamp and heal brush tools to get the sloth claws to connect to the bird body. To make it look good I had to play with the opacities of both and paint new bird parts over the claws to make it so they weren’t floating, painting over the claws easily and at some points made unnatural looking straight lines which were hard to iron out. Taking into account the harder and easier parts of the project I would probably not work with birds. Compared to other animals they have more fine details, such as their feather and thin feet, which requires someone to work more carefully with the two new tools.
Wednesday, May 20, 2015
Painting In Photoshop
This time in Elements of Design we still stuck to using photoshop, but did something unlike other projects. Here we were tasked with painting in it and having the final result be purely by our own hand. What we would do is take a photo or picture from the internet and trace it followed by painting over it making it look semi real with a couple tools associated with the exercise.
For my project I made a painting of the Iron Giant, who is very geometric in shape, this translated to some areas of the project being extremely easy and others being tedious, time consuming, and generally a bad experience. On his chest piece and head there were large sections of monotone plating that only required to be filled in with a respective color, doing this covered nearly half of the image and took probably a fiftieth of the time securing its spot as the easiest part of the project by far. By contrast his neck, upper chest, and hand all were made up of small segments that had to be individually colored, blended, shaded, and more. Every piece took a similar amount of time regardless of size so this part ate up almost the entire project duration and most of my attention making it easily the hardest part.
No work I did this year has been perfect and I don’t think anyone can say differently regarding any work, this implies that different parts of the work can be improved. One thing that falls into this category is my blending job between like and contrasting colors on the body. The background I used left, wherever blending occurred, a blueish tinge that doesn't belong. On the other end of the spectrum what ended up being a stronger aspect was at some points creating a seamless edge between color contrasts without shading that made the area look less like a cartoon.
The objective of the assignment was to use the brush tool, including the mixer brush tool, and the pencil tool, along with the other tools we learned to use in the past to take the original photo, transfer its colors, and give it a sense of realness and the aspects of a painting. In my project I use the pencil and brush tool extensively in first tracing the original image and then to get all of the colors of the original onto the new work. After this I used the mixer brush tool to take all of the rough lines caused by the trace and make an appeasing gradient between contrasts. After doing all that the project was completed and looking back there are a few things I would change. For one I definitely would have chosen a more organic subject to paint. There were very little to no gradual color changes in the original that makes a subject look real and it was hard to create these in the product. However, all the same i’m not disappointed with how everything turned out in the end.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Andy Warhol was a major contributor to the modern art scene with some of his most famous work being Pop art. It would take a person and warp their color onto a gradient plain making them look like an object. For our fifth project in Elements of design we were tasked to create our own pop art with an image of ourselves or a friend. Compared to other projects this year it took a short time to complete and on a personal level I think it turned out nice.
In making my Pop Art a lot turned out well and in some ways unexpectedly. Its strongest aspect would have to be how the image composition worked with the cutout filter and coloring to improve its original quality. The original picture of James, the subject, had his eyes almost closed and had parts of his face out of focus. But, after all the necessary transformations he now looks like he has a deep expression and pops from the background. By contrast the weakest aspect of the work would be how color variation and complementation is lacking some images, specifically the purple and brown image looks out of place.
Given that this project took the least amount of time to complete there was a lot that was easy about it. What was easiest was the setup for the image so you could transform it into pop art. It was as simple as taking an image and putting it through a filter or two, after this you just need to adjust the size and that’s half the project. What was most difficult about the project, though still comparatively easy to other projects this year, was getting the colors onto the gradients of the transformed image to make it pop art. Sometimes the magic wand tool would not select everything it was supposed to if small lighter areas were isolated, this even happened with contagious unchecked. Messing around with the tool to get it to work was tedious and had some difficulty.
The project’s objective this time was to use a multitude of tools to properly transform the image, these included the crop, magic wand, paint bucket, and paint brush tool. The crop tool was used to take the original image and size it properly after sizing it up to the project size, you use it by just selecting an area and pressing enter to get rid of the unselected area. The magic wand tool was used to select each grey gradient which would then be colored. The paint bucket tool could fill in a selected area while the paintbrush tool does the same thing except you do it by hand. I my project I used the tools in this way to take the grey gradient of my picture and make it pop with color. If I had to do one thing differently though I would definitely use lighter and more vibrant colors. Given the context they just look better than browns and darker purples.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)