syringe

syringe
“It's the greatest shot of adrenaline to be doing what you have wanted to do so badly." ― Charles A. Lindbergh

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Diver & Logo

I can't believe I'm doing this at 2:30 in the morning.

Here's my final project for Analytical Figure drawing with the Pearl Diver  I added the giant clams, swim fins, goggles, & broken harpoon.  I also added underwater caustics on the sea bed & gobo lighting on the temple wall.  The image also has a gradient & a color saturation.

I came up with a concept for the logo using Wes Wilson's psychedelic design.  This time I focused on the negative space to create an outline of the letters.  The pattern is more about coral design & less about being psychedelic.  It actually resembles a turtle shell in some aspects.

There are 3 versions of the Diver.  The 1st one is a black & white copy.  The second is a straight color version.  The 3rd one is slightly grainy with noise applied to it.

The grayscale version is very tricky.  Instead of switching the mode to grayscale, I applied a black & white adjustment layer then adjusted the levels, so I wouldn't lose the detail on the image.


Color


With Noise


Black & White


Thursday, April 2, 2015

Young Murron

Here’s my final clip from Braveheart using 3D layers.  Murron, the 2 purple flowers on the left, & a green shrub on the right are cut into separate layers in Photoshop then imported into Afterfx to create the illusion of 3D space.

The hard part was recreating the background minus these 3 objects.  I used the pen tool to draw the marquee around the objects for accuracy.  Later I used the clone tool & the spot healing brush to recreate the missing parts of the background in Photoshop.

In Afterfx I used a freeze frame as a placeholder for  where I would split the footage & later insert the 3D work. 

The water color images were done using the same process.  The good news is that I didn’t have a background to clone.  I added a paint stroke footage with a blue solid, then I masked out the black background using a luma matte.








Original Film Still


Background With Objects Removed



Watercolor Version