This one is a little messier, as you can see I changed the composition several times, spending most of my time. Each of the versions probably could have worked, with some extra time.
I started with quick color blots to get started. I don't care about the first brush strokes, those are more of a warm up.
I like the initial composition, but I felt the boat was too small and the drawing would feel too empty. I'd need more environment design to make it catchy.
I made the ship bigger as it's the main focus of the image. My issue with 2nd composition is the perspective. Foreshortening can be tricky and I wasn't sure I could pull it off right in just a few minutes.
After 10min or more messing with the ship I finally found the position I liked. It's very clear and relatively simple.
At this point I merged all of the layers since the extra layers with minor adjustments felt unneccessary.
I added some atmospheric light on a separate layer set on overlay. I played around with color settings, till I achieved colder, deeper feeling colors.
Ref: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/808255464361842233/
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/434175220325199170/
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/122371314862552394/
Next, I turned off the overlay later and worked more on the scene. I added some rough corals and a school of fish (1 fish copy pasted). Later I copy paste the whole set and flip it to fill the empty space. Little details like this makes the drawing feel more complex than it really is.
Finally, I changed the direction of the light and added some quick highlights to define the ship. I was running out of time, so I had to compromise. With more time I'd probably try to achieve more atmospheric perspective, by making the back of the ship blend a bit with the background. The sand is quite rough, but I should have found better reference for that. Finding reference is included in the 30min limit challenge.
Thank you for reading!