@IvanTDN
Ivan Onestrani

Fiona
Fiona by @IvanTDN (Ivan Onestrani)
  METHOD:  Skin looks the way it does on us in the 3D world due to layering and translucency.... So I did several treatments of her in different media [pen, Prismacolor pencils, crayon, markers, -- Yes crayon --, and pastels (several)].  Then these were all transferred to overhead transparencies.  Said transparencies were then laminated to the fave pastel* crayon layer and the final product scanned in.

Yes you are not supposed to do that with a laminator—crayon that is, but the uneven smear-melt effect is worth the risk. I made sure at the time that I had extra copies of all treatments via color copier, so I could attempt again if necessary. The original pencil sketching was done by visually averaging the previous works on her parents. See Below. The extra title was added as na afterthought in P-Shop. The font fit. CHARACTER: She is a 4TH generation RPG character; my wife plays her, she played her mother and grandmother also. A roomie played the other grandmother and the father. She is a sanguinevore but not Undead. Long story; there are fae, hellspawn, trolls and dwarves all in her lineage…

Category:
Rating:
Mature (N)
Class:
Finished Work
Submitted:
19y287d ago
Tags:
None
Other Work By @IvanTDN

Comments & Critiques (0)

Preferred comment/critique type for this content: Any Kind

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in and have an Active account to leave a comment.
Please, login or sign up for an account.

What kind of comments is IvanTDN seeking for this piece?

  • Any Kind - Self-explanatory.
  • Casual Comments - Comments of a more social nature.
  • Light Critique - Comments containing constructive suggestions about this work.
  • Heavy Critique - A serious analysis of this work, with emphasis on identifying potential problem areas, good use of technique and skill, and suggestions for potentially improving the work.
Please keep in mind, critiques may highlight both positive and negative aspects of this work, but the main goal is to constructively help the artist to improve in their skills and execution. Be kind, considerate, and polite.