I was asked to create a prince & princess Kawaii doll. Since I already did that, I decided to create an Elizabethan style king & queen. If you're looking for historical accuracy, these are not it! I just whipped something together without references, because sometimes that's what I want to do!
Here's the Kawaii King & Queen. Have fun coloring!
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Monday, April 28, 2014
Preparing Drawings in Photoshop
It was a busy weekend and I'm writing this on Monday instead of planning ahead! My sister & brother-in-law own a small fitness business (I did all the branding design *shameless plug*) and every year they and some of their clients run in a local race. I decided to bring my oldest son to run it while my youngest son had a father & son day.
I'm not athletic AT ALL but I was very proud of my sister, brother-in-law, and my cousin for running it. It's hard work and I'm too lazy for running. My son, Noah, however, is a born athlete and loved everything about the day: running his first race, watching the runners coming in, just everything!
Here's my handsome boy (and a peek at one of my nieces!). He had a great day, I had a great day, and we're all pretty tired today!
Anyway, enough of my proud mommy ranting.... Let's get to the art!
First, I want to thank everyone for their words of encouragement. I have a goal to professionally publish a doll. It's not going to be Wicked Women, but it'll be something, sometime. I'm not one to give up and I love creating too much to stop!
Today we're going to look at how I prepare my sketches. For a long time, I would draw my doll base, trace it to create templates, draw the clothing on the templates, then trace all of that again to my watercolor paper in order to paint the final image. There are some flaws with this method. Like making a copy of a copy, some of the accuracy is lost in each tracing step. That would mean hours of clean-up in Photoshop after spending hours painting!
What I've been trying to do now is fix the lines in Photoshop before I do anything else. It's much easier to fix the fit and accuracy of the lines than it is to correct the painting after it's done. I've been doing this for my recent dolls regardless of the final medium.
So here are my revised steps: draw a doll base, trace the doll to create templates, draw the outfits on the templates, scan & edit in Photoshop, print and trace (if painting). It's an extra step and an extra set of line drawings, but it's totally worth it.
Start by scanning your images. I have a Canon Pixma scanner/printer and LOVE it! I scan my drawings at 600dpi. I like high resolution so that 1) I can preserve as many details as possible and 2) images are clear when you shrink them but not when you enlarge them.
Once I have the images scanned, it's time to go to work. I'm using Photoshop CS4. I have the current Cloud version, but my antique computer has a hard time running it. Any photo editing software should work for this. I scanned my images in black & white. I don't need colors for this project and scanning in color would have added to the files size, so I didn't bother.
The first thing I like to do is adjust the levels. In Photoshop, go to Image>Levels. Use the eyedroppers to adjust the image. Select the white eyedropper, then click on your image until the white of your image because the "white" that you want.
Make any adjustments to the doll base before you edit your outfits! In this case, I don't see anything I need to edit. I'm happy with the lines, everything is pretty clean, and I'll be painting this in watercolors so it doesn't need to be totally perfect here. I'm more interested in adjusting the accuracy of the fit on the clothes. Save this file as your doll base.
Next, open an outfit file. I copy & paste it into the doll base file. Be very careful about saving these files! There have been MANY times that I've accidentally over-written a file and it is not fun.
There should be two layers in the file: the doll base and the outfit. Keep them on separate layers and name your layers! I set the outfit layer to Multiply and reduce the base layer to 50% opacity. You can also lock the doll base layer if that helps.
When adjusting the outfits, I like to either fit the most difficult part, or maximize the total fit. Here's what I mean. On this doll, the head and right side fit well. I can make small adjustments there and focus on bigger corrections elsewhere. Here, I need to fix the left side (circled in red). Keep in mind how the outfit will fit the doll. I won't adjust the bodice here because that will be uncut white space on the final doll. Don't waste time & effort on things no one will see.
There are so many ways to correct your drawings. You can select & move sections around, use the Clone tool, or draw directly on the image. I find myself doing this more. It's just drawing, afterall, it doesn't matter if it's pencil on paper or stylus on tablet. The red line here is my corrected line. Choose the path of least resistance: I chose to redraw one line here instead of fiddling with the fit of the entire arm. It's the easiest solution. Once you draw your line, erase the old line immediately to avoid confusion.
Here's a place where I selected and moved the line on the arm. The hand is a little trickier...
I erased the whole hand. The fit was really off. I kept the ring and the lines for the glove and got rid of the rest.
Instead of redrawing the hand, I went to the doll layer, selected the hand, and then right-clicked and selected Layer via Copy. Place this new layer above the outfit and set it to multiply. Erase any parts you don't need.
And that's it! I only have 11 more to do... I joke, but this is so much easier than adjusting a final image. Depending on the errors, adjusting an outline might take an hour or two. Adjusting the final painting can take two or three times that amount.
Once I correct the fit, I'll add some of the details that would be hard to create by hand, such as repeating patterns. That's what we'll look at next week. Til then, have fun in Photoshop!
I'm not athletic AT ALL but I was very proud of my sister, brother-in-law, and my cousin for running it. It's hard work and I'm too lazy for running. My son, Noah, however, is a born athlete and loved everything about the day: running his first race, watching the runners coming in, just everything!
Here's my handsome boy (and a peek at one of my nieces!). He had a great day, I had a great day, and we're all pretty tired today!
Anyway, enough of my proud mommy ranting.... Let's get to the art!
First, I want to thank everyone for their words of encouragement. I have a goal to professionally publish a doll. It's not going to be Wicked Women, but it'll be something, sometime. I'm not one to give up and I love creating too much to stop!
Today we're going to look at how I prepare my sketches. For a long time, I would draw my doll base, trace it to create templates, draw the clothing on the templates, then trace all of that again to my watercolor paper in order to paint the final image. There are some flaws with this method. Like making a copy of a copy, some of the accuracy is lost in each tracing step. That would mean hours of clean-up in Photoshop after spending hours painting!
What I've been trying to do now is fix the lines in Photoshop before I do anything else. It's much easier to fix the fit and accuracy of the lines than it is to correct the painting after it's done. I've been doing this for my recent dolls regardless of the final medium.
So here are my revised steps: draw a doll base, trace the doll to create templates, draw the outfits on the templates, scan & edit in Photoshop, print and trace (if painting). It's an extra step and an extra set of line drawings, but it's totally worth it.
Start by scanning your images. I have a Canon Pixma scanner/printer and LOVE it! I scan my drawings at 600dpi. I like high resolution so that 1) I can preserve as many details as possible and 2) images are clear when you shrink them but not when you enlarge them.
Once I have the images scanned, it's time to go to work. I'm using Photoshop CS4. I have the current Cloud version, but my antique computer has a hard time running it. Any photo editing software should work for this. I scanned my images in black & white. I don't need colors for this project and scanning in color would have added to the files size, so I didn't bother.
The first thing I like to do is adjust the levels. In Photoshop, go to Image>Levels. Use the eyedroppers to adjust the image. Select the white eyedropper, then click on your image until the white of your image because the "white" that you want.
Make any adjustments to the doll base before you edit your outfits! In this case, I don't see anything I need to edit. I'm happy with the lines, everything is pretty clean, and I'll be painting this in watercolors so it doesn't need to be totally perfect here. I'm more interested in adjusting the accuracy of the fit on the clothes. Save this file as your doll base.
Next, open an outfit file. I copy & paste it into the doll base file. Be very careful about saving these files! There have been MANY times that I've accidentally over-written a file and it is not fun.
There should be two layers in the file: the doll base and the outfit. Keep them on separate layers and name your layers! I set the outfit layer to Multiply and reduce the base layer to 50% opacity. You can also lock the doll base layer if that helps.
When adjusting the outfits, I like to either fit the most difficult part, or maximize the total fit. Here's what I mean. On this doll, the head and right side fit well. I can make small adjustments there and focus on bigger corrections elsewhere. Here, I need to fix the left side (circled in red). Keep in mind how the outfit will fit the doll. I won't adjust the bodice here because that will be uncut white space on the final doll. Don't waste time & effort on things no one will see.
Here's a place where I selected and moved the line on the arm. The hand is a little trickier...
I erased the whole hand. The fit was really off. I kept the ring and the lines for the glove and got rid of the rest.
Instead of redrawing the hand, I went to the doll layer, selected the hand, and then right-clicked and selected Layer via Copy. Place this new layer above the outfit and set it to multiply. Erase any parts you don't need.
And that's it! I only have 11 more to do... I joke, but this is so much easier than adjusting a final image. Depending on the errors, adjusting an outline might take an hour or two. Adjusting the final painting can take two or three times that amount.
Once I correct the fit, I'll add some of the details that would be hard to create by hand, such as repeating patterns. That's what we'll look at next week. Til then, have fun in Photoshop!
Friday, April 25, 2014
Fairy Tale Fashion Friday - Rapunzel
It's another Fairy Tale Fashion Friday! This is my favorite - Rapunzel. It's for entirely vain reason! For most of my life, I've had ridiculously long hair. It's mainly out of laziness. I'm absolutely THE WORST client for a hairdresser. Getting a haircut makes me miserable. So I let me hair grow until it gets out of control. I literally get my hair cut about once every 5 years.
And two weeks ago, I cut my hair. All of it. I went from waist length hair to chin length! It was very liberating. And it inspired this doll.
So enough about me. Here's the doll! The pdf file is huge so it'll take a minute to download. It's also a two page doll! I had fun creating a new brush to make the braid, so you'll see more braids on future dolls. I forgot to note that the white sections on the wigs need to be cut out. The whole second page is just outfits.
Enjoy!
And two weeks ago, I cut my hair. All of it. I went from waist length hair to chin length! It was very liberating. And it inspired this doll.
So enough about me. Here's the doll! The pdf file is huge so it'll take a minute to download. It's also a two page doll! I had fun creating a new brush to make the braid, so you'll see more braids on future dolls. I forgot to note that the white sections on the wigs need to be cut out. The whole second page is just outfits.
Enjoy!
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Kawaii Wednesdays - Flowers
Today's dolls are supposed to have outfits constructed out of flowers & leaves. The boy has a Robin Hood style hat and that's probably my favorite part! I'm not sure the outfits totally worked but I liked it well enough to post it.
I'll have another doll up on Friday & I'll be starting Wicked Women over the weekend so some of that should be up for Monday. I'm still taking request on media -- watercolor or Photoshop!
Here's the Kawaii doll:
I'll have another doll up on Friday & I'll be starting Wicked Women over the weekend so some of that should be up for Monday. I'm still taking request on media -- watercolor or Photoshop!
Here's the Kawaii doll:
Download Kawaii Kids - Flowers pdf here
Monday, April 21, 2014
A New Project Walkthrough
I belong to OPDAG and contribute to the Paper Doll Studio magazine. Recently, one of the themes was queens. I did a fantastic sketch and thought maybe I should expand it. I loved this sketch SO much that I figured this might be the one I would submit to Dover for publication (and I sent something else to the magazine). Like so many paper doll artists, my dream is to be published by Dover. I'm finally at a point where I feel like my art is of sufficient quality to share with the world. I've had some good feedback about my self-published dolls and thought, this is it.
It wasn't.
I finished my sketches this week on a paper doll I've been calling Wicked Women. It features one doll and 12 outfits covering witches, evil queens, and the like from fairy tales and children's stories. As I occasionally do, I started browsing Amazon and came across this:
It wasn't.
I finished my sketches this week on a paper doll I've been calling Wicked Women. It features one doll and 12 outfits covering witches, evil queens, and the like from fairy tales and children's stories. As I occasionally do, I started browsing Amazon and came across this:
It looks beautiful. It's coming out from Dover in May. Ugh.
I'll be honest, I was pretty upset. My husband (who has been taking management training courses & expressing his "wisdom" lately) tried to calm my down. "It's a great idea, it's an original idea, someone just beat you to market." Ugh again. I have a hard time coming up with original, creative paper doll themes that haven't been done yet. I mean really, look at Dover's catalog and you can find just about everything. And that's wonderful! I love that they have such a broad variety of themes represented. It just makes my task a little more daunting.
So here's the thing. I have a doll I love. I have the outlines done. What do I do? Finish it? Abandon it? Focus on a new project?
I'm going to finish it. And I'm going to share the whole process here. I can't share the sketching process because that's done. But everything else is going here. I have one thing I need to decide -- watercolor or digitally coloring in Photoshop. I'm going to take reader opinions into account for this one. Feel free to leave a comment (or email me, I check that all the time, too).
Here's an overview of the sketches:
Characters featured will be: The Queen of Hearts and the Red Queen (Lewis Carroll), the Sea Witch from the Little Mermaid, the Dark Fairy from Sleeping Beauty, the Sorceress from Rapunzel, the Wicked Witches of the West and East (Frank L. Baum), the Wicked Stepmother from Cinderella, the Snow Queen, the Evil Queen from Snow White, the witch from Hansel & Gretel, and Morgan le Fay of Arthurian legend. This image above is a composite I created from images I took with my phone so they aren't great. I'll be scanning & starting this (and a new, top-secret doll that *fingers crossed* HAS NOT been done yet!) in the next few days and weeks.
So my excitement for this project has been a little tempered. My loss, though, is your gain!
Again, let me know if any of you have an opinion about the media choice for this project: watercolor or Photoshop. And thanks for reading that rant!
Friday, April 18, 2014
Fashion Friday - Daisy
I saw a graphic on Facebook the other day that said "If I had known spring was only going to last 3 days, I would have gone out & enjoyed it more." That is exactly how I feel this week! My oldest son saw snow on the ground yesterday and groaned, "Mommy I don't like that!" So to cheer everyone up, I have a pastel hued doll.
Here's Daisy with a pastel, frilly wardrobe. Enjoy!
Here's Daisy with a pastel, frilly wardrobe. Enjoy!
Download Fashion Friday - Daisy pdf here
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Kawaii Wednesdays - Fire & Medic
Today seemed like the perfect day to post a firefighter & medic paper doll set. The page is a little crowded this time. I wanted to make sure that both dolls had both costumes!
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