You're free now!
Go find a wife and make a whole bunch of freak babies!
Anyway.
Obviously, it's not a real Flutterby. Just another example of my wild imagination getting lost in the forest of trees that don't exist, again.
You'll miss a lot of what's actually there, if you don't pay close attention. As usual though, I don't really want to give much away. It's more fun when you think you see something, then wonder if I did that on purpose, or what.
These things usually take a long time. I had been working on that for about six days, in between other projects; spending a few hours here and there.
Couldn't decide on a background. I had probably spent about two hours working on one and then thought, no! That looks like crap!
So, whatever, I just used a simple image of a lake I produced awhile back.
Since The Flutterby is saved as an individual layer, I'll be able change that background and swap it out with something else, if I ever wanted to use him inside of some creative writing, for instance. A lot of my work is saved in that fashion, especially when it comes to some of these characters I've produced over the years:
Total freedom...
when it comes to digital art.
Nothing needs to be a finished forever product, unless that's what I intend to do with it. I have plenty of work complete, yet I can spend a few more hours adding bodies or placing these characters into environments that better suit a story line. It's quite normal. They certainly don't draw Homer Simpson from scratch for each frame needed to finish an episode of The Simpsons. Drawings get reused constantly.
Anyway...
It seems I'm rambling again.
But I guess that's still better than spending hours upon hours working on The Flutterby, slapping it down here inside the blog, saying nothing, and calling it a post.
Yeah...