SamSuka
DovSherman
DovSherman

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Mother-Daughter Teatime - Process

1. I started with a very rough thumbnail.

2. Following the general layout, with some changes, I go back and work out the proportions and perspective more accurately and toy with ideas for the outfit but without worrying about the detail yet.

3. Now I do a more detailed sketch, working out the the body, clothing, and props.

4. Inking. I use a variable-width inking brush for the characters and a constant-width brush for hard things on vector layers. I use lots of different layers for different parts, which makes it easier to overdraw and erase as needed. I also went ahead of inked the shape for the eyelashes because the brush stablization in Manga Studio makes it a lot easier than doing it in Photoshop later. I exported the inking for the lashes and the tables in the background on separate layers.

5. In Photoshop, I convert the imported lines to a folder with a mask and put a solid black layer in the folder. (CTRL-click RGB in the Channels tab, invert the selection, create a mask from the selection.) This will come in handy later when I color the linework. Then I painted in the backdrop with simple bricks and shrubbery.

6. I create another folder and start creating the basic color blocking. I like to do all my color blocking by making a folder and then filling it with different solid color layers for each section of color, whch makes it easy to change a color later. This is a very fussy way to do it and it's probably much simpler to just fill a single raster layer with flat colors.

7. Form shading. I create a dark brown solid color layer (linear burn) and start painting in the basic form shading with a soft airbrush. For the hair, I used color burn for richer shading and I used a variable-width soft airbrush to smudge detail into the shadows, picking up the shape of the hairs. Since this scene is in the sunlight, I turned down the opacity of the shading layer by 10% from what I usually use.

8. Cast shadows. I make a new dark brown layer set to multiply and start painting in the cast shadows with soft brush, using a smaller brush in places where the object casting the shadow is closer to the thing the shadow is on.

9. Backlight. A very desaturate pale solid color layer (normal blend mode) painted with a soft airbrush. When I combine it with the form shading, backlighting really makes the characters pop. I don't use any backlight on non-reflective objects. For extra glossiness, I also added a white forelight to just the extra shiniest parts.

10. Shiny. I used a solid white layer for the primary shine and painted spots and streaks using a hard variable-width brush. After painting all the shine, I use the cast shadow layer to make a selection and delete the shine from anywhere covered by shadow. For the shine on the hair, I started with thin strokes with a variable-width brush, then use a smude tool to add detail and softness to the tips, then use an airbrush to add a soft glow to groups of streaks, then use an airbrush to fade the tops and bottoms of streak groups, and finally use a soft round brush to erase a few streaks in the middle of each group.

11. For the blush, I add in a light red layer, airbrushing just on the same area as the skin for the cheeks and other cheeks. I use the same method to add color for the eyeshadow.

12. Colored linework. Going back to the linework folder, I started adding new solid color layers, using the mask to paint the color of the linework. Since the new layers are inside a folder with a mask defining the linework, I don't have to be very precise when coloring the lines. I always add new color layers below the ones I already did so that I can be sloppy in the areas that are already covered by colored linework. I like to keep using black lines on the hardest objects to give it a contrast with softer objects. I also used lighter colors on objects in the background.

13. Eyelashes are done with a folder containing a solid grey layer and a solid black layer. Using the lashes I made earlier with a variable width brush, I add a few thin streaks on the grey layer mask to add depth to the lashes and soften the look with a few strokes of a soft airbrush.

14. For the sweatbead, I used a white layer with the fill turned down just a little and add a layer effect with white inner glow set to 100%. Then I use the mask to soften the edge where it touches the skin. After, I add a new white layer to paint in the shiny highlights.

15. Finally, I added a little sparkle to the wedding bands to draw attention to them.

Mother-Daughter Teatime - Process

Comments

All of your pics tell such an awesome story :) it's easy to see because of the amazing amount o detail you put into them :) it would be easy to draw the guy sitting there looking embarrassed, but you are awesome enough to add in the slight hunch and have him nervously looking around, meanwhile the wife looks deep in thought like she's coming up with some kind of plan :) It's all in details as they say and it's a big reason why you're my most favorite artist :D Th time and effort you put into your pics really make them feel alive and natural, like a photographer just happened to pass by and took a snap shot :) Pictures can tell a thousand words as they say and your's most certainly do :)

Hina Yui

You interpreted every single detail exactly way I imagined it. :D

Dov Sherman

Another simply fantastic pic!!!!!!!! I really like the setting in this one and it's looks super sweet, mixed with a hint of mischievous evil :D What I really like about the pic is his makeup and hair, in that his makeup isn't all out super glam and that he's wearing what looks to be a wig :) it really adds a sense that maybe this was something he did himself and wanted to surprise his wife wit, who in turn was maybe a bit mischievous and wanted to show him off in town :) But you can tell from her expression that she is quite liking her new daughter and is thinking of a way to keep her around, and maybe the guy is starting to regret it ;) As for the outfit though is is super fantastic with is adorable ruffles and ultra fluffy petticoat that makes him look ever so girly and delicate, and that's before you get to the gorgeous girly bow at the back :) The frilled ankle socks are incredibly cute too and of course those heels just add even more adorableness :D I really love the wife's outfit too though with that perfect mother's day outfit that obviously shows who the grownup of the two is :) And then you get the awesome poses with the guy obviously embarrassed and trying to make him self smaller and less noticeable (no easy feat in that outfit) while still trying to look happy while being with his wife :) The background is really well done too I particularly like the way you did the bushes in the background and the flooring, it all really gives the sense of a high class outdoor cafe, along with the super cute chairs and tables too and I really like the tea set too, that has a really nice pattern on it :D All in all a really fantastic pic and hopefully he wont be too embarrassed during the mother daughter shopping trip later that day ;)

Hina Yui


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