No Soul

No Soul
Originally posted on: April 6, 2015

⚠️ Note: This post is over 10 years old. It was originally published on April 6, 2015. It may contain outdated information on my skills, or reflect my views at that time, which could differ from my current perspectives.

Sometimes when I'm tired or feeling down I find it hard to be creative or motivated to do anything. I typically call this apathetic feeling, "no soul." I was feeling this way shortly after I had purchased my Intuous Pro. I decided to force myself to be creative and I made this piece that says No Soul. I don't write graffiti in real life, but I'd imagine I'd write this if I did. The Intuous Pro came with a demo version of Autodesk SketchBook Pro so I decided to try my hand at it. I started with just the glossy letters, which I'm very happy with:

(Click for Larger)

NoSoul_Letters

For the glossy letters I had the following ideas in mind. First, I wanted the main strokes to be wider on the bottom-right portions of letters, and narrower towards the top-left portions of the letters. I also wanted the letters to come in and out of the foreground. I wanted each letter to have near-parts and parts in the distance. Lastly, I decided the letters should interlock where their near-and-close parts overlap. The fill I painted and smeared with various brushes in SketchBook Pro, and finally added 2 layers for the glossy high-lights and the sharp specular high-lights.

At this point, I decided I wanted to push the drawing further, so I added valves and some kind of mysterious vapor emitting from them:

(Click for Larger)

NoSoul_Gas

Although I used the paint tools to make the gas clouds, I did not paint them like I would for traditional media. I actually painted them solid and changed the various blend-modes for the layers of clouds. I also erased part of the clouds so fore-ground bits of the letters appeared to cut through the fog.

The last idea I had for this project was to put a slightly warped and shaded brick wall behind it.

NoSoul_WallGas


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