April 27, 2012
bravestwarriors:

More Emotion Lord Rough Designs
Bob Flynn’s taken a stab at a whole bunch of designs for Emotion Lord from “Bravest Warriors.” Here are a cluster.
Bravest Warriors, the series, will debut this summer on Cartoon Hangover. Follow us on Facebook for continuing, enthralling information.

bravestwarriors:

More Emotion Lord Rough Designs

Bob Flynn’s taken a stab at a whole bunch of designs for Emotion Lord from “Bravest Warriors.” Here are a cluster.

Bravest Warriors, the series, will debut this summer on Cartoon Hangover. Follow us on Facebook for continuing, enthralling information.

April 3, 2012
// close-up //
We rarely see art on the web at really high resolutions. Everything looks sharp and perfect, but relatively small. Even when we work on paper, we eventually scan and process our work via the computer. The impulse is to clean things up—to remove what appear to be imperfections in the digital realm. Make whites white— blacks black. Get rid of all the dust and scratches.
With this snow scene (posted at the end of 2011), I purposefully didn’t clean up the scan of my inks. I experimented with my coloring and layering to make the image look like it was silkscreen or letterpress, on top of the ‘dirty’ scan. It was fun!
This is a screenshot of a zoom at 100%, on a 600 dpi image in Photoshop.
I like that you can see the tooth of the paper and the jagged edge of the ink. Which is somewhat interesting to preserve on a screen, but entirely unnecessary in print.
As the web slowly becomes HD, I wonder if more artists will reject the impulse to clean things up. Or if we’ll become even more hyper-perfect.

// close-up //

We rarely see art on the web at really high resolutions. Everything looks sharp and perfect, but relatively small. Even when we work on paper, we eventually scan and process our work via the computer. The impulse is to clean things up—to remove what appear to be imperfections in the digital realm. Make whites white— blacks black. Get rid of all the dust and scratches.

With this snow scene (posted at the end of 2011), I purposefully didn’t clean up the scan of my inks. I experimented with my coloring and layering to make the image look like it was silkscreen or letterpress, on top of the ‘dirty’ scan. It was fun!

This is a screenshot of a zoom at 100%, on a 600 dpi image in Photoshop.

I like that you can see the tooth of the paper and the jagged edge of the ink. Which is somewhat interesting to preserve on a screen, but entirely unnecessary in print.

As the web slowly becomes HD, I wonder if more artists will reject the impulse to clean things up. Or if we’ll become even more hyper-perfect.

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