Hand drawn art.
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No bytes were harmed in the painting of this book cover....which is more than can be said for some of the characters in the short stories.
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Beautiful work Alan, but I would never have expected anything different.
Scott
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hehehe chill down igor,i didn t belive that u have 14 so when u post the drawings i realize that u really are 14 years old
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I used to draw - back in the '90s.
At the time, I was collecting a lot of animation art, and was inspired by the Disney original watercolor background scenes that were selling for $40,000.
I decided I wanted to learn to watercolor, so I looked up a watercolor class. The instructor asked if I had ever drawn before. I said not really, so she told me to take a drawing class first. So, I took a drawing class and found I really liked it. Never did get back to watercolors after that.
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@igor said:
besides, you are probably suffering from what i call the "driver's license effect", where you think you look really bad in you dirver's license picture, but everyone else looks great. i've found the same thing translates into art: you think your drawing stinks, but everyone elses' looks awsome. see what i mean?
I call this "Guitar Players Syndrome" where you think every other guitar player is better than you, and they think you're better than them.
I can't draw, so here are some of my "audio doodles"
http://the.j.walkers.googlepages.com/06feb23a_mixdown01.mp3
http://the.j.walkers.googlepages.com/06feb23b_mixdown01.mp3
http://the.j.walkers.googlepages.com/06feb23c_mixdown01.mp3
http://the.j.walkers.googlepages.com/06_song.mp3 -
Any Industrial Designer worth their weight in salt who's ever worked on developing lots of ideas really fast will tell you there is nothing that will ever replace hand-generated sketching. Period.
Hand-generated sketching is vital to virtually all engineering drawing and design related careers. Generally, drawings are used to capture and develop ideas. Often, if not usually, drawings used in professional practice begin with a sketch - production drawings, development drawings, working out problems, blah, blah, blah.
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Jim - I hear ya on that one. I can never look at my old art (or new for that matter). The feeling and joy of finishing a drawing/project and loving it. Seconds later, I'd look at it and feel ashamed at the mess I created. Oh well.
Here's an old concept I did way back when:
My blog post that went with that drawing:
http://www.giantmonster.tv/giant/?p=319I don't think it's perfect, but I always loved the attitude in the gesture. Amazingly poor shaping in the helmet though. Ugh.
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Here's one of my pencil drawings. Can you tell who it is?
Todd
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Stinkie as an old man?
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I didn't think it was that bad!!
http://i.cnn.net/si/multimedia/photo_gallery/0705/gallery.beards.moustaches/images/alzado.jpg
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@unknownuser said:
Here's one of my pencil drawings. Can you tell who it is?
Is it Gomez from the original Adam's Family TV show? -
ofcourse, lyle azado a football player, man your old like me
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@unknownuser said:
Here's one of my pencil drawings. Can you tell who it is?
For a moment there I thought it could be a young Joe Cocker.
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The point is that i almost replace hand drawings with 3d modeling,
i rather prefer to start a car from 0 in 3d than making a sketch.
when i was at school i drowe a lot on my notebooks,on the desck ,on the blackboard(tuning cars posted in magazines,newspaopers straight on the page ) but just from lateral because or i don t have the eye formated for making something complicated or is because i have no experience.
So when i m modeling the ideeas comes as the model upgraded.As u could see on my cars there are not verry detailed(i try to improve that).
Now i wish i can do some studies but is quiet expensive so maybe modeling will be just my hobby.
Cheers!
P.S :the drawing by todd is luciano pavarotti or that actor who looks like him imo
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hey, monsterzero, you sketch (whitch is really good by the way) kind of reminds me of a dark trooper form star wars. (here comes the part only i would know, im a nerd. arent we all?) the dark trooper was employed by the evil galactic empire, but were never seen in the films. they were, infact, robots and not humans. as such, they were never trusted with anything more than small blaster pistol. i think the epmire was destroyed before they could be fully developed by Vader's R&D team, but im not shure. here is a link for more info:
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Dark_trooper
and here is an image similar to you sketch:
http://starwars.wikia.com/wiki/Image;Darktrooper.jpgPS: remus, thanks for the prespective tip on my sketch, i knew something was up with the hood area (bonet to you guys in the UK). i will try to do a new sketch and fix it.
on the mean time, here's another one of mine. i was just messing around while trying to master reflection. there are a few errors, but whaterver. -
im sorry, did i scare you all away with my nerdy-nes?
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i would post some more of my stuff, but myscanner wont pick up all the light pencil marks. guess i'll just have to take a picture of it then. i have a really good drawing done all in pen, but a friend has i right now. i will have it back soon though. trust me, everyone i showed it to went "woah, did you draw that? thats really good!". yes, that was an actual quote.
im so modest, aren't i?
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Very observant, Igor. The Dark Trooper was first conceived of for the game Dark Forces released by LucasArts. I was the creator and writer for the concept as well as the art director for that game. That was some time ago
The information on the wiki is pretty accurate. When you say that they weren't trusted with larger weapons, I'd say that isn't correct. In fact they had pretty large and powerful weapons - too large for a human to hold with just one hand. The Phase III weapon could be held by putting the rather large magazine on a human's shoulder and operated with two hands - yet in the D Trooper could hold it in one. In short those guys are huge!
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I used to draw incessantly when I was young. I wanted to be a cartoonist at one point, but I became distracted by computers when I found that I could actually earn a living as a programmer (this was in 1965!), and that most cartoonists are starving.
My pencil and ink drawings have long been replaced by computer graphics, but I still have an example or two of my earlier stuff. Here's my vision of the Department Store Santa of Christmas Future as the front of a Christmas card I did in 1976:
And here's a vector graphic I did of it a couple of years ago in Xara X:
Obviously, I need to do a SketchUp version, and make it a trilogy...
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