
The followup to part 1, funnily enough.
So it looks like being used to preying on the weak and weary left the Gore Magala ill-suited to fighting capable combatants, and it's now being damned to the Daora's digestive workings.
I'm definitely gonna draw some Gore pred sometime, I like his design too much not to. Not this one though, it's a bit too late for him.
Part 1 http://www.furaffinity.net/view/20066575/
Part 2 http://www.furaffinity.net/view/20066617/
Part 3 coming soon
Part 4 maaaaybe ???
Gore Magala, Kushala Daora and all things Monster Hunter belong to Capcom.
The art belongs to me.
So it looks like being used to preying on the weak and weary left the Gore Magala ill-suited to fighting capable combatants, and it's now being damned to the Daora's digestive workings.
I'm definitely gonna draw some Gore pred sometime, I like his design too much not to. Not this one though, it's a bit too late for him.
Part 1 http://www.furaffinity.net/view/20066575/
Part 2 http://www.furaffinity.net/view/20066617/
Part 3 coming soon
Part 4 maaaaybe ???
Gore Magala, Kushala Daora and all things Monster Hunter belong to Capcom.
The art belongs to me.
Category Artwork (Digital) / Vore
Species Western Dragon
Size 1280 x 795px
File Size 109.9 kB
I appreciate the compliments, and sorry that I couldn't be a little more open with the creative process. I like the idea of streams but I don't feel I'd work well while being watched.
The first picture came together surprisingly quickly, felt like it only took a couple hours, though I'm not entirely sure. The second took a fair bit longer, partly because I was on-and-off over the course of three days. After the first couple of hours I ended up with this http://sta.sh/05ftrfvlkkd which I wasn't particularly happy with, so I came back to it at another time to rework it.
The first picture came together surprisingly quickly, felt like it only took a couple hours, though I'm not entirely sure. The second took a fair bit longer, partly because I was on-and-off over the course of three days. After the first couple of hours I ended up with this http://sta.sh/05ftrfvlkkd which I wasn't particularly happy with, so I came back to it at another time to rework it.
you should also try to reduce the canvas size its too big to work on, you will need bigger ones if you will improve on details in the future but for now its plain too big to normally look at it ^^ but its nice to see people like the style and tell you you improved, good job!
This picture has a nice natural look. I wonder, do you start using a lineart and then erase them? Or are you painting directly just as your mind goes?
Or are you just drawing some circles to know where everything shall belong and then paint?
I'm not very good at drawing and i assumed that everything starts using a lineart.
Or are you just drawing some circles to know where everything shall belong and then paint?
I'm not very good at drawing and i assumed that everything starts using a lineart.
Here's an overly simplified idea of how it's done with a WIP that may or may not be the 4th panel.
http://sta.sh/023vbvc1y1fo
start out with a sketch of the pose you want, doesn't have to be too detailed. In a separate layer, draw over the sketch in flat colour to get a silhouette of what you want to draw. After that, highlighting and shading are done on this layer using the marker tool with the blend setting quite high. Overlaying the sketch layer on top of the colour layer while drawing makes it easier to see where everything ought to be.
Credit where credit's due,
Avezola showed me how she did it with one of her most recent pictures, so go check her out if you want to see better examples.
Also, you really don't give yourself enough credit. Your line art's neat, you know how to shade and highlight, you're waaay better than I was when I started out.
http://sta.sh/023vbvc1y1fo
start out with a sketch of the pose you want, doesn't have to be too detailed. In a separate layer, draw over the sketch in flat colour to get a silhouette of what you want to draw. After that, highlighting and shading are done on this layer using the marker tool with the blend setting quite high. Overlaying the sketch layer on top of the colour layer while drawing makes it easier to see where everything ought to be.
Credit where credit's due,

Also, you really don't give yourself enough credit. Your line art's neat, you know how to shade and highlight, you're waaay better than I was when I started out.
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