Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Just finished a self portrait for art class.
I know my eyes are weird, but that's the way they were in the photo, I drew them exactly as I saw them.
http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/e...1124082003.jpg
It's always when I finish one of these that I realize how little it looks like what I'm drawing from...
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Llama Juice
See Ross... at night.. your pupils dilate so that you can see more light than there actually is, in CG we have to make up for that because we can't force black at someone and expect their eyes to make up for it when it doesn't work the same for a TV screen. When the detail just isn't there, then the detail isn't there. Your eye's aren't going to fix it.
I'm quite aware of that. I have better night sight than most of my friends. However, I'm also quite aware that on a moonless night, there are still going to be things you can't see worth shit. I don't want to overbrighten it (and not nearly as much as you did) because then it will look like shit on my monitor. Mine. I created this to look right on my monitor, not yours. I don't know what settings you use, for all I know you could have your brightness at 0% and your contrast at 5%. I have them at 10% and 100% (of what my monitor can do by itself) and it looks fine to me. Sure I have to squint if there's glare off the dust on my screen, but in normal lighting conditions it's fine. If you can't see it, either do something about your monitor settings or don't bother to look at it at all. I want useful crit, not people trying to customise my work to fit their bloody settings.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Llama Juice
There's going to be ambient light anyways.... the only place you'll find stuff that dark is if you're in like the rain forest at night where the trees might be able to block out all the atmospheric light from cities miles away.
Or, you know, on the leeward side of a large building on a moonless night (although that's irrelevant anyway, since it's not dark at all on my monitor). My goal was to reproduce what I'd see in that environment, and I more or less nailed it (if anything, there's too much colour). It might be entirely wrong on your monitor, but that's your problem, not mine. I don't want to fuck about with guesswork when it comes to deciding the level of brightness, colour and contrast i use.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Advancebo
Low quality picture is low quality, also why are there visible waves on the carpert?
There's this funny thing called aliasing, I suggest you read up on it
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Advancebo
It looks nothing like a Thomspon M1A1 should, find more refs and start over. Lay off the miniscule and utterly pointless chamfers, too.
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
@ ExAm, the shading is kinda low contrast, makes the whole thing look bland, I had to get out of the habit of shading like that. Work with blacks and whites, not just grays, would definitely help with the shirt.
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Reaper Man
@ ExAm, the shading is kinda low contrast, makes the whole thing look bland, I had to get out of the habit of shading like that. Work with blacks and whites, not just grays, would definitely help with the shirt.
I was working in soft pencil, there is ONLY gray >_>
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
No, with hard pencil there is ONLY gray. Soft pencil is awesome for blacks. Unless we misunderstood each other, soft is 2B, 4B etc etc.
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Reaper Man
No, with hard pencil there is ONLY gray. Soft pencil is awesome for blacks. Unless we misunderstood each other, soft is 2B, 4B etc etc.
6B, and I couldn't get the shading to look right any darker, it wouldn't smear into something smooth, always looked like pencil marks. I'm guessing I'm using the wrong kind of paper.
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
...6B and you couldn't get black? How lightly were you pressing man? I did this with 6B + soft chalk because it was getting too dark. I used cartridge paper.
http://img241.imageshack.us/img241/7...feign10nl6.jpg
Re: The Studio Quick-Crit Thread
I'm not into anything that advanced yet. I can't control my shading when pressing down that hard.