@wolfger Haha, true. I decided I could probably start with a bit more optimism this year. My first sketch with ballpoint pen had crows, candle, crystal ball and a old grimoire. But I felt sad only looking at it (photo under), so I probably reacted into the opposite direction π€£
Conversation
Notices
-
David Revoy (davidrevoy@framapiaf.org)'s status on Tuesday, 02-Jan-2024 14:02:00 UTC David Revoy -
Santa Claes πΈπͺππ°π (clacke@libranet.de)'s status on Tuesday, 02-Jan-2024 14:02:00 UTC Santa Claes πΈπͺππ°π @davidrevoy I was just going to ask!
Your process in the video looked surprisingly linear, so I figured you had some prototype, either in Krita or on paper, that you were working off.
-
Santa Claes πΈπͺππ°π (clacke@libranet.de)'s status on Tuesday, 02-Jan-2024 14:02:05 UTC Santa Claes πΈπͺππ°π Still cool to see it wasn't entirely figured out, as you started with the small waterfall, changed to P&C and then finally went for the empty library.
I love how much you're sharing of your process and material, always fascinating to see even if I don't paint myself and won't make concrete use of it.
-
David Revoy (davidrevoy@framapiaf.org)'s status on Tuesday, 02-Jan-2024 14:03:48 UTC David Revoy @clacke Thanks! Yes, π I like to prototype on my sketchbook; it's a good way to put an idea on paper and see if it is a brainfart or something a bit deeper.
It also helps me to keep focus when I start Krita: I work better with a target. If I don't, I can paint-over and change ideas forever during the first steps π Thanks for noticing all the little changes on the process!Santa Claes πΈπͺππ°π likes this.
-