
This took a really long while. This started with a well-planned layout of the interior background, setting up objects, then sketching them out with perspective changes and so, opted for a one-point perspective to show depth in the composition. Then I worked on it as I would normally do, except this one was quite a challenge for me to bring out how good I am at putting objects in perspective with the proper size/proportion... and I believe this turned out pretty well. I did use some technical drawing techniques to work out on the proportions. I'm not one for interior designing but it's a typical American house interior design I guess, which was really the goal for me to achieve.
Anyway end the technicality chitchat. Here's a cute red panda bab coloring some coloring pages with his beloved Stitch plush just watching over him. So adorable~
Commission for:
thefluffystitch
Anyway end the technicality chitchat. Here's a cute red panda bab coloring some coloring pages with his beloved Stitch plush just watching over him. So adorable~
Commission for:

Category Artwork (Digital) / Baby fur
Species Red Panda
Size 1280 x 720px
File Size 214 kB
Listed in Folders
Thanks! My shading style consists of a hard solid shading then a soft shading, I use a shading color that would fit the scenario (in this case because it's daytime it'll be a warm color, on nighttime I'd use a dark blue color or so), how I actually picture out how to shade the scenario is well, kinda based on experience and casually observing how light works, I pass by artworks too that I can use as reference to observe how they do the lighting/shading. I shade with solid shading first on all the elements then I use soft shading to establish gradual shadow value changes (the farther an object is from a light source, the darker, additionally take note of cast shadows which would be darker). I try to think in 3-dimensional context to figure out how to shade things too, to gauge distance.
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