Thanks Shifty!
But seriously, do whatever you would like to do and don't worry if you change your mind or don't have time! If you want a copy of the story to read (about 11,000 words) then let me know and I can e-mail it to you. You will of course be properly credited. Thanks again!
Damn dude, should've dropped me a line in Trust. I completely forgot about this thread after it disappeared into the history of GD!
I shall see what I can do for you. I'm working on a couple of album covers at the moment
How do some of you guys get so good, have you taken any classes or do I need to expand beyond just having my HB and cartridge paper?
I know it's tedious and everyone always says it but practice is all you need! Even the top historical fine artists didn't start out the craftsman they're regarded as today, it presumably took an entire life span to become what we see in the work.
Me, I've never taken an art class in my puff. Regrettably I never even took art as a module choice in school, either.
People say I'm pretty good but I've no idea where it comes from, to my knowledge there's no history of art in my family. I drew a bit when I was younger, always found it easy. Could water colour a landscape or sketch out an image of bugs bunny but pursued it no further until recently.
So, that's well over 10 years of no drawing which goes to show anyone can pick it up again with even a small degree of determination. Leave the stress of proportioning or technique at the door. Headphones on with your favourite tunes and relax into it.
Remember drawing is everything - by that I mean it's not simply lines like everyone thinks. Painting is drawing too. I find drawing with line pretty difficult. To me, it's much easier to stick a blobs of paint on a canvas or in Photoshop and refine them into the appropriate silhouettes and shapes! Everyone is different but experimentation is key!
Here's some recently doodles I've done using just this technique