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deviantID

*toerning
By Believing, One Sees.
Artist
United States
Current Residence: San Francisco, CA

What is the thing that actually makes you personally donate money on Kickstarter? Not grabs your interest, but actually makes you donate? 

55%
752 deviants said The Project- I want that final product to be in the world.
27%
370 deviants said The Person- I want to support that individual.
12%
163 deviants said The Incentive- I want that prize.
6%
77 deviants said Other- comment?
SPECIAL GUEST STAR (against his knowledge) IS :iconandrew-ross-maclean:

You guys know when I get really excited about art geekery, I JUST CAN'T KEEP IT IN.  I also feel like composition is a really hard thing to learn, and all you can really do is try to learn "what is good" in composition, and then try to find examples until you can recognize it.  In addition, composition for comics is extra hard because you have to worry about the overall flow of the page as well as the composition of each individual panel.

So I was doing my spring cleaning of my message center and came on some new comic pages he uploaded, all of which are awesome, but take a particular look at this one:

This page is AMAZING.  I started watching this guy for his slick style and stayed for his crazy composition skills, and this page makes a particularly good example because his work is so clean and straight-forward, there's not a lot of noodling to distract from the motion lines.



1- We read left to right (thanks to MikeMoroney for pointing out my idiot type-o there,) and then up to down, so we start in the upper righthand corner here.  The hills shoot us right into that ship, tallest thing on the horizon, first focal point.

2- Little rock trail creates a path for us to go between the sea (extreme background) to the castle, (middle ground), and then the line of the bird picks it right up.

3- Line of the beak and back of the bird, up and around that wing with the considerate curved negative space behind the back wing.  Also, the bird is flying right>left, if it were the other way around, our natural inclination would be to follow it right off the page.

4- Strong diagonal is the main shape of the bird.  Shoots your eye right down to the second row.

5- Here's where it gets sexy.  Little moments of low-contrast details keep your eye interested and get you right into that upper left-hand corner again, where

6- Sharp diagonal line directs you into the next panel.  Shadow lying scientifically impossibly on the two walls that make a corner?  Doesn't matter if no-one questions it because it looks so right.  Also worth mentioning that ll the lines of the walls and windows in panel 2 are slightly warped to the right to help keep us going forward.  

7- Line is continued in the netting, again, low contrast and interesting detail as opposed to strong contrast which would indicate important content like in

8- Back with the bird, amazing action line up and over.

9- Line of wall and line of shadow funnel energy into that sword grip.  THAT'S A GRIP.  

10- Contrast of the light arm provides the direction.  Once again, down and over.  Panels at the end of a line can't keep going off to the right- that just falls off the page and takes you out of the flow.

11- All the rope lines continue that trajectory.  They're only unparallel for the sake of interest.  As with the cobwebs in 5, and the netting in 6, he's using repetitive objects to guide your eye and provide interest but at the same time demonstrating it's not something you really need to spend a lot of time with.

12- BIRD.  It's literally an arrow in the direction your eye is moving.

13- Prow (or whatever) hijacks the flow, reinforced by the hills and the negative shape of sky.

14- Simple diagonal shadow line like in panels 2&4 showing you where to go.  That finger has just come DOWN on that wick.

That's just the first pass look.  Obviously, you have to stray from this path to see a lot of what's going on, but if you feel like taking the time and looking at all the details, you'll find his page still works on every level.  For instance, on panel two, you need to get down to that sword and candle.  If you do so, you'll follow those warped window and wall lines down, where the sword stops you, and redirects you to the candle on the table.  Then that horizontal patch of light that it's in, and the up-and-to-the-right markings on the table guide you right into that netting on panel 3.  So hot.

Comments


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:iconconsoroza:
IT'S STILL THE RAGE, IT'S NOT LATE AT ALL. *nudges and winkes with a maniacal smile on her face*
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:icontoerning:
Hahaha so I hear, from my rocking chair, on my porch, with my hearing aid.
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:iconnight-is-my-day:
Mood: Shame ~night-is-my-day Feb 17, 2013  Student General Artist
I love your style- I was curious what your RISD submission looked like. Can you post it please? :)
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:icondrewcampiondrew:
Cheers, I added you at may friend area, FAVED your illustrative technique sample. It's great work !
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:iconryanlovelock:
~RyanLovelock Jan 23, 2013  Professional General Artist
beautiful work! amazing sense of story, character, mood and atmosphere in your work! great!
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:iconju-z:
~Ju-z Jan 22, 2013  Hobbyist Traditional Artist
Love ur style!!! D8
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:icontoastpete:
Lovely. Thanks for the brain candy.
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:iconnataliecartman:
Your so tallented! keep making us glad with your works !
wantching you *_*
Reply
:iconccs1989:
Huge fan of your work, especially the fanart for The First Law because that stuff is so rare. Have you read "Red Country" yet? I'm half way through it and I think it's my favorite since the original trilogy (Best Served Cold and The Heroes were also great, but this new one has something special.)
Anyway keep up the great work!
Reply
:icontoerning:
I JUST READ IT AND IT WAS SO GOOOOODDDDDD Way way WAY better than Best Served Cold and the Heroes. I was so sad when I finished I had to re-read the First Law haha. Nothing compares....to Glokta. My my.

Thanks for the kind words!
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