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    Concept art + SketchUP - 'Lesbian Vampire Killers' film

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    • N Offline
      nomeradona
      last edited by

      excellent skills. and thanks for the step by step lead there alex. amazing.

      visit my blog: http://www.nomeradona.blogspot.com

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      • plot-parisP Offline
        plot-paris
        last edited by

        great work, Alex.
        thank you very much for the tutorial! 👍

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        • E Offline
          Ecuadorian
          last edited by

          Thank you very much!
          Sheer genius!
          I'll try it in ArtRage... as soon as I get a tablet.

          -Miguel Lescano
          Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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          • A Offline
            andyc
            last edited by

            Ecuadorian: Although I now use Painter, I spent a while working wth Artrage - you can certainly get equally good results with this great little package. Painter does make the whole process a little easier, but then you do pay for it!

            Alex: just taken the time to look over your re-vamped (pun not intended) website. Nice to see the new stuff in there! What I particularly like about your work is that even the 'photo-real' matte work retains a subtle painterly quality. For reasons I can't quite pin-down, this style always seems to integrate a litte better with the original filmed footage than the ultra-slick cgi style that is so prevelant now. Perhaps because the paint strokes are reminiscent of film-grain...? (although know you also add grain digitally) I hope the increasing trend to film on-set with digital cameras won't mean a decline in this painterly style.

            cheers,

            Andy.

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            • pilouP Offline
              pilou
              last edited by

              I have translated your tutorial in French for the French section 😉 ☀

              Frenchy Pilou
              Is beautiful that please without concept!
              My Little site :)

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              • A Offline
                Alex Jenyon
                last edited by

                @unknownuser said:

                Alex: just taken the time to look over your re-vamped (pun not intended) website. Nice to see the new stuff in there! What I particularly like about your work is that even the 'photo-real' matte work retains a subtle painterly quality. For reasons I can't quite pin-down, this style always seems to integrate a litte better with the original filmed footage than the ultra-slick cgi style that is so prevelant now. Perhaps because the paint strokes are reminiscent of film-grain...? (although know you also add grain digitally) I hope the increasing trend to film on-set with digital cameras won't mean a decline in this painterly style.

                Thanks man! I got a lot of feedback on my old site (a chunk of it from this forum), and tried to take it all on board.

                Interestingly, I think almost all of the 'film work' I've done was on plates that were actually shot digitally - 'Lesbian Vampire Killers' was shot on the RedCam, RocknRolla was shot on a digital Arriflex (A D20 I think). The same issues as film still seem to apply - I am STILL amazed at how rough, soft and indistinct most 'filmed' footage actually is - even on modern digital cameras. So you are 100% correct - super sharp, crispy CG just doesn't cut it. That's one of the reasons I love painting by hand, even with access to Vue, Renderman and an internet full of photo archives. It's also something that is dying off to some extent - there are lots of matte painters (pro-level ones) who will freely admit they can't paint for toffee.

                @Pilou - first time for everything! Don't think I've had anything I've ever done translated before... 🤓 Thank you!

                AJ

                Concept artist / Matte painter
                www.aj-concepts.net

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                • A Offline
                  andyc
                  last edited by

                  "there are lots of matte painters (pro-level ones) who will freely admit they can't paint for toffee." Ain't that sad.... And yet some whose work is largely photo-based, are also great painters - I'm thinking of Dylan Cole, whose concept sketches blow me away as much as the finished pieces. I think (hope) real artistry will always shine-though. Only last week I was looking at some of Michael Pangrazio's old work for the first Star Wars Trilogy. Old-school painting on glass. It's amazing how loose his brush work was, and yet how well it read on film.

                  Anyhow, keep on keeping on 😎

                  A.

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                  • majidM Offline
                    majid
                    last edited by

                    it was amazing , and the describtion is really fantastic , but i think it needs lots of experience + artist eye to reach such renders you've made.
                    thanx for sharing

                    My inspiring A, B, Sketches book: https://sketchucation.com/shop/books/intermediate/2612-alphabet-inspired-sketches--inspiring-drills-for-architects--3d-artists-and-designers-

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                    • E Offline
                      Ecuadorian
                      last edited by

                      Yes, there are some intangible skills at work here that can't be teached. And that's what I like to call Art.

                      -Miguel Lescano
                      Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

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                      • D Offline
                        devincig
                        last edited by

                        oh ! amazing ! I've saw a video that they draw monalisa with pain softwhare,and now is you !

                        http://www.flickr.com/photos/8839214@N03/

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                        • R Offline
                          romain210
                          last edited by

                          cool

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                          • S Offline
                            Solidseal
                            last edited by

                            hmm cannot see the pictures 😞

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