Zana Shivenheart WallPaper June 14, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Art/Illustration.add a comment
Wallpaper of Zana Shivenheart from the Lithea Alice and Bob comic. Hope you guys like it.
Comic Jam 6-9-2010 June 14, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Comic Jam.1 comment so far
Howdy all. Been awhile since the last comic jam post ya? Well here’s the latest from the Boulder Co-op group. We had a ton of people show up that we had to split up into several teams of 3. What the comic jam revolved was this:
Write down a scene, character, dialogue, whatever. Pass to the left. Draw what was written down. Write down the next panel. Pass to the left, repeat. Each team has 3 people, so the last pass returns to the original writer and they get to draw the last panel! This was a pretty cool set up. Hope you all like what has been cooked up.
Til next time. Peace~
-Dalis
The Two Sister O’Baud and Simon May 6, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Art/Illustration.3 comments
Was going through my old art gallery and my recent stuff. Found my first picture of Pico that was done… wow, in 2003. This was before she was an actual character and was simply a drawing of a “Girl and her Blob.” Added Pico’s current character sheet as well. The third image is of Alice O’Baud, Pico’s older sister, with the robot Bob. By this point, Bob and Alice’s character designs have been tweaked a bit, but these images get me rather energetic to work on the comic… Oh right, and last but not least, Simon! The Vedgieclerk Vendor dude!
5-04-2010 Comic Jam May 6, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Comic Jam.add a comment
Hey all, been awhile since we last posted a comic jam but here we are! After the Comicfest being done ‘n’ done, it sure is good to relax a bit and get back into the root of it all… and be lazy again somewhat. Introducing Brad into the group, we hope to see him in the future as well! None the less, today’s Comic Jam is based on the idea of…
The artist will draw panels for the comic. A fighting scene. It will then be passed to the left where dialogue will be put into the first panel. Past to the left again, fill in the next panel, etc. Of course, the lines need to make sense with the rest of the story… erm… as close as possible anyways. Here are the results!
03-24-2010 Comic Jam March 27, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Comic Jam.add a comment
From a big turn out with the comic jam of 10!
How To: Create Word Balloons February 25, 2010
Posted by Dalis in How To.add a comment
Alright so you got your piece but you don’t have the words to give it life. That’s where this little walk-through comes in. First up, load up the image you want to use. We’ll use the picture I had loaded form the last tutorial (But with colors finished, etc) First up, create a Layer that’s on top of the list. This layer will be the one where the Balloon will be created with.
Next you will choose the Circle tool as seen here. Make sure your main color is White, since the balloon will be white.
Next you will click and drag til you got the shape you want. You’ll get a outline of the circle you’ll want, like so:
Now right click and choose Fill Path. Hit Ok. This will fill in the Circle.
Now the next step is to get the tail. First hit Enter. This will remove the current path (Which isn’t needed anymore)
First choose the Pen Tool:
You will then want to click once, where the tip of the tail of the word balloon will be. You will then make a second click/drag inside the word bubble. The dragging is to help you get the curve you want for the tail of the balloon. Once you have the tail you want, just let go of the mouse.
Third is just to click on the bubble to help prep for closing the tail.
Finally, click the Starting point of the path, aka the first point you made. You will hold down the mouse button like before until you get the curve you want.
Right click and Fill in the Path like you did when creating the circle. Hit enter afterwards to remove the path and the image should look like this.
Now to give the word balloon that black lining. To do this, the layer in which the balloon was made, you will want to Double Click it. Do not double-click the name or else it’ll ask if you want to rename it, but double-click the area that’s to the right part of the name where it’s open. This window will be brought up:
Next you will check mark Drop Shadow and select it so it is High-lighted. This will allow you to set up the properties of the drop shadow.
What I like to do is set up the setting “Pin Light” in the Blend Mode. Opacity set to 100%. Distance: 0. Spread: 100. Size: 5. And uncheck Global Lighting.
Once you are done, hit Ok. Insert your text and you are done!
Hope this How to guide helps a few of you in making comics. I’d appreciate any feed back of course or questions. Cheers!
-Dalis
PS. If you look at the clock on the top right, you’ll go “Does it really take this long?” No it doesn’t, it took this long only because I was making the tutorial and taking screenshots, etc :P
How To: Clean-Up February 25, 2010
Posted by Dalis in How To.add a comment
Hi there everyone. This is a post to review the clean-up that I had shown on Wednesday. These are the basic steps I use to clean-up and prep a comic for coloring or just cleaning it up in general. This is done on Photoshop CS3, but I know it can still be done on Photoshop 4(Yeah, 4, the REALLY old one)
So the first thing here is to get the image you want to use. Normally I pencil in the art, pen it, then erase the pencil. This makes clean-up much easier. In this case, I have no erased the pencil work and kept it in. Place your scanned image as a separate layer so you can work on it more easily.
Now the first step is to make it easier to manage. To do this, turn it into a black and white image. You can do this by going to Image -> Mode -> GrayScale
It will ask if you want to discard the color information. Say yes. If it asks if you want to flatten the image, say no. You want to keep everything as a separate layer.
Next is the actual clean up, setting up the levels of the image. The result of doing this is to bring out the blacks and whites, while lessening the grays (Pencils).
To do this you will want to go to Image -> Adjustments -> Levels
By choosing levels it’ll bring up this window:
You’ll notice little arrow things on the window. Slide them back and forth and you’ll see results on the main image. Adjust them accordingly until you have the desired effect.
Once that is done, now it is time the eliminate the white of the image while keeping the black. Think of it as inking a transparency sheet. There’s no white on it, but the lining remains. This way you can color what ever you want, underneath, without it overlapping the Black Lining.
To do this you will want to look on the lower right of your screen where you can find tabs. You will want to click on the Channel tab.
You should get this screen. While here, on the lower part of the selections, choose the circle button. Just click it once. It’ll make your line work crawl with ants so to say.
Once you see the ants crawling all over your screen. Hit delete on your keyboard. The result will be that your whites have been removed from the line work.
Now the next step is to re-darken the image. To do this, click on the Layers tab and click on the Preserve Transparency button as shown here:
What Preserve Transparency does is makes it so what you color, only effects the layer. So in this case, the line-work. NOW before I forget, deselect the image so there are no more ants. You can do this by going to Select -> Deselect.
With Preserve Transparency selected, take the Pencil tool, choose the color Black (Or Red if you want the line work to be red, or whatever color you want) and stroke over the line-work. This will re-darken the artwork.
LAST step, just go to Image -> Mode -> RGB (This will turn colors back on)
Now your piece is ready for coloring. Just create a layer underneath the Line-work in the Layers tab, choose that layer and color where ever you desire. The line-work will be preserved while colors are added. If you have any questions or corrections to be tossed in, I’ll edit the post accordingly! Peace and happy arting!
-Dalis
02-24-2010 Comic Jam February 25, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Comic Jam.add a comment
This is the development for Wednesday’s comic jam. The goal was to write a setting. Pass to the left. Write a conflict. Pass to the left. Draw the first panel… pass to the left, draw next panel, etc.
The Adventures of Blobby! & Misc. January 25, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
I was going through the net and found the old webcomic I tried doing(but later trashed and revamped the story) but I found a random comic I did for it involving the adventures of Blobby, the pet blob who’s always hungry! It’s very short and straight forward. Hope you all like it.
The mini-comic also gave me an idea I wanted to play with when I was learning hand-drawn animation
My Film: I Wish, original story by Vera Brosgal
Comic Jam January 15, 2010
Posted by Dalis in Comic Jam.1 comment so far
This is the set created by the artists for Wednesday’s comic jam. The challenge was to create a picture, then pass the piece around, where a caption is added to the bottom. The caption that best fit the picture is placed here!







































































