My first batch of drawings on my Wacom Intuos. I still haven’t got the feel for sketching on the tablet. Nothing beats the good ol’ tactile feeling of led on paper and the ease of getting that thick and thin of the graphite just by tilting the pencil. I switched to pencil and paper on my second batch. This turned out to be more promising. For my third batch of drawings, I felt more comfortable with the features and this turned out to be the ones that I am happiest with. I wasn’t able to submit this in with the other two, being respectful of the deadline. I learned that I need to restrain myself from rendering thumbs. I took quite a long time to produce my homework. I knew I was doing something wrong. Rendering is force of habit I think, since I never really had thumbnailing as part of my workflow before. I also can’t see the likeness until I render it and if I don’t, something inside of me tells me that I must keep at it because it’s in there somewhere .
Jul 23, 2010 @ 04:14:28
My first batch of drawings on my Wacom Intuos. I still haven’t got the feel for sketching on the tablet. Nothing beats the good ol’ tactile feeling of led on paper and the ease of getting that thick and thin of the graphite just by tilting the pencil. I switched to pencil and paper on my second batch. This turned out to be more promising. For my third batch of drawings, I felt more comfortable with the features and this turned out to be the ones that I am happiest with. I wasn’t able to submit this in with the other two, being respectful of the deadline. I learned that I need to restrain myself from rendering thumbs. I took quite a long time to produce my homework. I knew I was doing something wrong. Rendering is force of habit I think, since I never really had thumbnailing as part of my workflow before. I also can’t see the likeness until I render it and if I don’t, something inside of me tells me that I must keep at it because it’s in there somewhere .