Good morning, Steemit! I just dropped off at school. It’s a great feeling to be sitting down to a Steemit post this early in the morning. I love being able to make two blog posts in one day and mornings like this are the only way it happens. I have a ton of editing to get through and a possible lunch with a Steemit friend, so I most likely won’t have a chance to draw today. I did, however, want to share some drawing I fit in yesterday. You can see some of the process in my
post “Art therapy at @caffetto drawing Pennywise! LIVE NOW!”.
is obsessed with IT at the moment […the reboot from 2017, not the original]. I am and always have been a diehard horror enthusiast, but I wasn’t excited for the new interpretation of IT. It has been my son that’s drawn me in to see how brilliant this film is. He’s not allowed to watch the movie […for obvious reasons], but we do watch trailers and featurettes together before bed. We came across one that took a behind the scenes look at the actors, including commentary by Bill Skarsgård; Pennywise the clown.
I’ve come around on IT. It really is a special horror film. In my opinion, it does a much better job than the original […which may be another reason it took me a while to warm up to this new one; I wasn’t crazy about the 1990 film]. All the Pennywise excitement in our home and a longing to keep drawing as I’m trying to mentally prepare to transition to comics full time, I decided it was time to draw a demonic shapeshifting clown that eats children.
I started with rough pencils on a colored background. I used reference from Google images, which you can see on the @dlive live stream replay. One of the things I love most about the iPad Pro is the ability to do split screen while drawing in Procreate. It’s made a huge improvement in my drawings and streamlined my processes of using reference. I do struggle with expression quite a bit, but surprisingly, Pennywise’s evil face carried over on the first draft.
I played around with color, which isn’t one of my strongest skill sets. I come from a background of pen and ink and wash from my years in art school. Of the many mediums of visual art, comics have always been my favorite. I like pencils and inks. When colors come in to play, I prefer them to look like comic book pages with proper flatting and distinct edges. I romanticize that I can do digital painting like ,
and
, but when I try, I veer back to colors that are laid down behind deliberate comic book style inking.
Learning […and experimenting] with color is something I’ll keep doing. I want to have all the tools to do a comic from it’s earliest stages to a finished book […including writing], but I have to admit, of all these stages of this drawing, the faint pencils and finished inks is my favorite. It’s the that’s still stuck in the 90’s, yearning to achieve what Todd McFarlane and Greg Capullo did with Spawn. Still, though, I’m happy with how this Pennywise turned out…especially considering I started it just for fun.
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