Here is an Aftereffects animation made at B-Train films for the TV series Generation Jets. Each episode had an informational montage where we would show a historical example to the tieback theme. Each episode was given two weeks to complete, this included concept, photo searching, photo modification, rigging of scenes, animation, coordination with animators and any notes that the company president would have. It should also be noted that there was a difference in oppinion between the off-site writer and the on-site director who wanted us to inject as much 'fun' as possible to the rather dry writing.
">
Saturday, March 22, 2008
WoW Fan-art
This is the most recent image I've been working on, along with two concept sketches preceding it and a pattern designed for the robe. It's a fanart piece for the massively multiplayer game World of Warcraft, it involves two 'mages' or wizards charging up to fight each other. The final design should involve two panels where you see the fight from both of their perspectives.
Diablo 2 and WoW Fan art
Here are two more pieces inspired by video games: the first is of a character from the PC game Diablo 2: he's a Necromancer and every time I tried to smooth it out his character got lost, so it remains rough and gritty. The second is of a common event in the Massive multiplayer World of Warcraft called 'Ganking' (it's when one player jumps a player on the opposite side), this image makes it look a lot more elaborate than it is in the real game.
Commercial Work for B-Train Films
Pictures with a purpose
3D Coffee!
Face turn-around
3D Skull
Photoshop Concepts
Here are four photoshop works: the first is trying to nail some 'less is more' style, next is trying to get a real feel for texture, next is a concept I had in my head for a while before actually putting it down, and last was trying to get the most out of three layers and opacity (a gradient for sky, white for clouds and black for the guy).
Pencil Drawings
Here are 2 pieces done entirely in pencil (the second has a color overlay for aesthetics). The first piece was commissioned for a wedding invitation and I worked very closely with the client to achieve just the right look they were going for, as you can see they wanted something mildly sketchy and by the time I was done with it they said it was exactly what they had in mind. The second image has partial reference to a sculpture of St. Michael, but the pose is made up.
Charcoal drawings
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)