Showing posts with label Cornhole Boards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cornhole Boards. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2015

3d print Model

I've been working on the second cornhole board painting for awhile. Here's a 3d print my brother made for me of the New Horizons probe. I was checking it against the drawing to make sure I got it pretty close (I think I changed it a little after this picture) and later I used it to help with lighting.

3d print of the New Horizons probe next to the underdrawing

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Mars Cornhole Board Process Part 4: The Painting

The Painting...

My studio becomes a mess whenever I paint.
    After I sealed the drawing with acrylic matte medium, I put down a few thin layers of acrylic paint. On top of that I pretty much just painted background to foreground. Mostly using thin paint at first and then thicker paints later, using my color comp and tonal as guides and changing whatever I think could be better as I go.

you can see the oil paints in the background, and the acrylic in the foreground.
I think it took me about a month of painting after I finished the drawing. I mostly used Liquin and Gamsol to mix with the paints. Sometimes when i need to paint on top of something that isn't super  dry and I'm afraid will pick up, I put down some retouch varnish and that seems to protect whatever's underneath. I did that a lot on this painting. Hopefully it won't burst into flames someday from all the weird chemicals and rushed drying times. I guess at the end of the day this is just a cornhole board, so I can't be too worried about the ill effects of sloppy oil paint procedures.  

slowly getting covered in oil paint.
Here's the finished oil painting. The whole project took me about 3 months. There was a lot of time spent learning technical things, hopefully the next one will go by a bit quicker. I have one more to make the set. Here are some close ups of the finished painting, shot with my iPhone... I should probably get a better camera.






 The whole project took me about 3 months. There was a lot of time spent learning technical things, hopefully the next one will go by a bit quicker. I have one more to make the set.

The finished cornhole board.

The theme of the next board is New Horizons, the current mission set to fly by Pluto in July and take pictures. I'm anxiously waiting to see those close ups. Both because I think they will be awesome and so I can start designing the board.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Mars Cornhole Board Process Part 3: Finished Drawing

The Final Drawing... This is where I did the research: built models, watched documentaries, read articles, studied reference pictures, asked lots of questions and tried to get everything pretty accurate. Although in the end I kind of just had to make some decisions and simplify a few things.

An Atlas rocket model, a painted soapbox for the tower, a mars/ rocks model I built from Sculpey and aluminum foil, and a cut out of the rover's back panel on a stylus.
After completing the tonal and color comp, I took the thumbnail drawing to Staples (before I painted over it) and had them print it out the size of the cornhole board on some cheap paper. I covered the back in pencil and transferred this to the board.




I cut around the rover and rocket because I had to redraw everything else like the rocks and smoke. And of course I had to add all the details on the rover and rocket/ launch pad, so I just drew all of that on top of the printed drawing with ellipse guides, rulers, french curves, a T-square and a whole lot of coffee.

The finished drawing on the cornhole board.

But even after you transfer it down, you kind of have to redraw it again to darken it a little more. Otherwise it's too light.

This part took me awhile. It can get pretty monotonous, but it's also kind of fun because you finally start seeing some details.

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Mars Cornhole Board Process Part 2: Color and Tonal

After deciding on the overall layout and finishing a semi-detailed drawing of it, I painted a few color sketches, the biggest one being done directly on top of that drawing. I kind of used this as my working color guide while I painted the final version.


 I knew I wanted to try and stay within a certain color gamut (which is something I had never done before) so I didn't experiment too much with what colors I used for the whole. But I did experiment  on each individual part, like the smoke. I must have repainted it like 7 times. So this one painting (the bigger one) represents about 10 little experimental paintings. 



I also chose to paint this large to get a little more practice with oil paint. I wanted to try out a few things before going to the giant 2 by 4 ft. cornhole board. After a certain point though, I didn't bother too much with it. I got what I wanted, so there was no point in adding details or fixing small mistakes.

At the same time I was working on the color guide, I was working on the tonal guide too. I did it digitally because I knew I'd be changing it a lot.


In the end I didn't follow either one of these exactly for the finished painting. They were incredibly helpful though.

Monday, June 22, 2015

Mars Cornhole Board Process Part 1: Thumbnails

I was commissioned to design a cornhole board with the theme centered around the mission that sent the Opportunity rover to mars. In the beginning we weren't entirely sure what that should include. It was initially just going to be the Delta rocket and Mars in the background. It later changed to include Opportunity as well. 

I started off with a lot of little pen and marker sketches. I also did a lot of planet studies in oil, just playing around with different textures and mediums and brushes etc. 

Mostly pen and sharpie sketches. Some oil studies too.



After a few dozen of those, I brought it into Sketchbook Pro and did some super rough tonal/ color thumbnails, just to get a little more mood into it. But nothing is final here or detailed at all. 



Putting a little tone and color in
Some of the weirder ones.

After we settled on the layout, I did some research and worked up a slightly more detailed drawing of the whole thing.

The final layout 9 x 18 in.


Sunday, June 21, 2015

Mars Cornhole Board

A few months ago I was commissioned to paint kind of a mash up of the Mars Rover Opportunity mission. Heres the finished oil painting Its 4 x 2 ft on a cornhole board.

In the next few days I'll post the whole process of designing and painting it on here.





Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Octopus Cornhole Board

The final drawing with some digital painting on top.

So for the second Cornhole Board I was asked to make, I was basically told to have the Octopus sort of reaching for the hole, coming out from the corner of the board.

Before starting right away on the board I wanted to learn a little about the octopus. So I watched a lot of documentaries on youtube and did a lot of sketches and a couple little study paintings. Here's a few of them:
Ink and wash on some watercolor paper

a really small oil painting.
I made an entire folder full of octopus sketches. Apparently I had no idea what an octopus looked like until i started researching it. 

After I finished the final drawing (which took awhile), I went to Staples and had them print it out on a huge piece of paper, the same size as the cornhole board. I covered the back in pencil and then traced it straight onto the board.
The final drawing. about 2.5 x 5 in.
The final drawing blown up and getting traced down to the board.

And then of course I painted on top of that for about two weeks...


This is me, probably ruining my back with that posture.

And here it is finished.




Sunday, August 17, 2014

Angler Fish Cornhole Board part 4

I decided to take a quick break and just kind of paint a little angler fish for no specific reason. It was more of a sketch I guess. Just for fun. Thats what this guy is. I used ink and wash.

Just a little painting for fun. 

But then I went back to the cornhole board...

I had to figure out what colors I wanted to use, so i did a few smaller paintings just to try things out. I kept it almost monochromatic because I really don't understand colors at all and i was afraid it would get to be too complicated when I was having enough trouble already.

So here are the much smaller practice paintings in oil.

about 6 inches tall.

about 12 inches tall 
These also helped me get used to the oil paint a little more. Or at least they were suppose to.

One of a few reference photos I used.
After realizing I couldn't put off the final painting forever, I did the finished drawing that had to be transferred directly to the cornhole board.
The finished drawing
So this was scaled up and drawn straight onto the board. Which I painted over on top of.  And then... After painting for a few weeks (which actually seemed like decades) The painting was finally finished... And that was that.

Here's the finished painting again, incase you missed it in Angler Fish Cornhole Board part 1.



Of course, finishing this only meant I was halfway done lol... So stay tuned for the octopus board coming up next!



Thursday, March 27, 2014

Angler Fish Cornhole Board Part 3

        After narrowing down all the thumbnail sketches in my last post, I ended up picking this one:

It's pretty rough, but I thought it was probably the clearest composition out of the bunch.

        I then had to come up with some actual angler fish designs. I really didn't know how I wanted him (actually a her, the males are tiny) to look. So I brought up a few reference images of different types of angler fish, and just kind of selected my favorite features from all of them. These are a few of the designs I came up with.




And this one was my favorite. I guess I liked the teeth or something.



         After I had the design, I built a little reference model or maquette (?) or whatever you want to call it. A fish out of Sculpey.

wooden stand, aluminum wire, aluminum foil, and sculpey

         I bought A wooden dowel and a block of wood from the hardware store, put them together and made a stand. Made a wire armature/ fish skeleton out of aluminum wire. Covered the wire with tin foil to bulk it out some. Glued all of that together with Two Part Epoxy. Got out the Sculpey and started sculpting.
Covering the foil with Sculpey.
And after a day or two of randomly working on it, It was ready to be cooked.




         I had to turn it sideways in the oven because it was too big. I shouldn't have made it so big, but I really had no idea what I was doing. If I did it again I would... still have no idea.


After it cooled down I just covered it in brown and white acrylic paint.

Finished.
In the next post I'll show you some of the experiment/ practice paintings.


Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Angler Fish Cornhole Board part 2

In the last post i said I'd give you some of the process of how I painted an angler fish on a cornhole board; This is pretty much how it happened...

The job was to do one board with an angler fish, and one with an octopus.

I started out with lots of small thumbnail sketches, just to try and come up with some ideas. I thought it would be cool if the two boards made one picture but could also serve as separate paintings... So I was kind of exploring an idea of an ancient abandoned underwater city where a giant angler fish and a giant octopus would meet or something, or a sunken ship, i really didn't know.


A few of the initial thumbnail sketches, they're all only a few inches tall.
so after doing a few of these I showed them to my client, and she didn't like any of them lol. She suggested that I keep it simple and just do an angler fish with his lure/light as the hole and the octopus reaching around the hole (I haven't done the octopus board yet) and not do the whole "one big picture thing."

After doing these sketches I found that I'm very slow at drawing. It takes me a long time to come up with something I'm not looking at it. I figured some research would help too, and that's when I decided to work on the angler fish and forget about the octopus for awhile. 

So after a few deep sea documentaries, angler fish anatomy charts and wikipedia pages, I made a tiny model to help me a little. 
He was only about two inches long. I used Sculpey and Toothpicks and a little wire.

With the new direction in mind I did some more studies/thumbnails. I feel like this part took me way too long. Someone with more experience would have breezed through all of this in a day or two, but by the end of this part I was already about a month in. I was trying to think about how the fish would look, what the lighting would be, how it would look on the board etc. all that stuff. 
A few of the thumbnail sketches, studies and ideas. 

In Part Three I'll talk about which thumbnail i chose, drawing the final fish designs and building the angler fish reference model.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Angler Fish Cornhole Board part 1

This is the first of two cornhole boards i was asked to design and paint.

I painted it in oil, which for me was a huge deal. Well actually, the entire thing was a huge deal for me. I'm completely new to oil painting (but painting in general too), color, drawing, just everything really. So it took a few frustrating months to actually call it done...
The finished painting on a standard cornhole board (2 x 4 ft. plywood board.)

In the next few posts I'll show a few of the steps I took to finish it.

Rough sketches, drafts, paintings, paint, and a reference model.