
A very belated thing I did for two friends. I think i started this in October.
68 color in Grafx2. 640x400.
I feel like I really phoned in the very end of this. This drawing was basically at 99% completion for months and I just didn't have it in me to finish it. Still I think it looks cohesive enough!
68 color in Grafx2. 640x400.
I feel like I really phoned in the very end of this. This drawing was basically at 99% completion for months and I just didn't have it in me to finish it. Still I think it looks cohesive enough!
Category Artwork (Digital) / All
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 640 x 400px
File Size 33.8 kB
Listed in Folders
Thank you!
Admittedly I think the doorway might've been a BIT small compared to the hyena in it, but generally I am very proud of how this came out.
I do feel like a lot of my issue with linear perspective in the past have been down to the vanishing points being too close to the frame of the final drawing. Which is logistically a little hard to avoid in say a classroom setting where you can't just hand any kid like a massive 22x30 sheet of paper and be like "now trim it to B5." I didn't figure that out until years later when I stumbled upon some uploads from an art professor on youtube with a course specifically about linear perspective. It might help to just have all the vanishing points going WAYYY far off screen to avoid having objects appear distorted.
Thankfully working at a small scale for pixel art makes this pretty easy. At a larger scale you can probably do thumbnails in perspective then scale it up for the final lines. The perspective rulers on CLIP and Krita are very useful.
Admittedly I think the doorway might've been a BIT small compared to the hyena in it, but generally I am very proud of how this came out.
I do feel like a lot of my issue with linear perspective in the past have been down to the vanishing points being too close to the frame of the final drawing. Which is logistically a little hard to avoid in say a classroom setting where you can't just hand any kid like a massive 22x30 sheet of paper and be like "now trim it to B5." I didn't figure that out until years later when I stumbled upon some uploads from an art professor on youtube with a course specifically about linear perspective. It might help to just have all the vanishing points going WAYYY far off screen to avoid having objects appear distorted.
Thankfully working at a small scale for pixel art makes this pretty easy. At a larger scale you can probably do thumbnails in perspective then scale it up for the final lines. The perspective rulers on CLIP and Krita are very useful.
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