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Kash
#661 Posted : 2/23/2013 6:49:42 PM

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Thanks. I was alittle hesitant to post becuase its not as complex as those digitally rendered art pieces. Photoshop is pretty much unexplored territory maybe I will have to finally check it out.

Totally know what you mean about the electric sounding buzzing Orion lol.
--------------------------------------------------*Kash's LSA Extraction* * Kash's Mescaline Extraction*------------------------------------------------------
All things I say are complete and utter ramblings of nonsense. Do not consider taking anything iterated from the depths of my subconsciousness rationally and/or seriously.
 

Good quality Syrian rue (Peganum harmala) for an incredible price!
 
spinCycle
#662 Posted : 2/23/2013 11:11:43 PM

Life is Art is Life


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Kash wrote:
Thanks. I was alittle hesitant to post becuase its not as complex as those digitally rendered art pieces. Photoshop is pretty much unexplored territory maybe I will have to finally check it out.

Totally know what you mean about the electric sounding buzzing Orion lol.

Photoshop is quite expensive if you get the full version. I use Photoshop Elements which is in the $100 range. It is designed for amateurs to manipulate their home photos, as opposed to the full version which is definitely geared towards professional graphic artists. Honestly, I have used some of the older full versions and there are only a few tools and functions I miss with the Elements version. For a savings of MANY hundreds of dollars I do without.

There is also a free program GIMP which is excellent. It is an amazingly full featured piece of freeware, will do most of the things that Photoshop does. Did I mention that it is FREE. Big grin

http://www.gimp.org/

Honestly, for someone starting out with computer graphics I would recommend GIMP and move on to Photoshop if you later find you want to. For most people GIMP will do way more than you will ever need. Thumbs up
Images of broken light,
Which dance before me like a million eyes,
They call me on and on...

 
spinCycle
#663 Posted : 2/23/2013 11:16:34 PM

Life is Art is Life


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Kash wrote:
Thanks. I was alittle hesitant to post becuase its not as complex as those digitally rendered art pieces.

Complexity is not the only or even necessarily the best way to judge art. To me it's about Heart and Concept. Think of music, there's a lot of pop music that is very well produced and complex, but is just forgettable commercial crap with nothing of value to say. And there is a lot of folk music which is timeless and speaks to human needs and emotions in ways that are deep and universal.

Technique isn't everything. It can even get in the way.
Images of broken light,
Which dance before me like a million eyes,
They call me on and on...

 
spinCycle
#664 Posted : 2/24/2013 5:48:57 PM

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Mr P, don't know why I didn't mention this before for you... you really should check out Painter or Painter Lite from Corel. It is similar to Photoshop, but is designed to resemble the more traditional painting and drawing tools. It is a very nice program for anyone who wants the familiarity of the tools they are used to plus has lots of digital capabilities added. There is a demo version available on their site. I think you'd like it.

Painter
Painter Lite
Images of broken light,
Which dance before me like a million eyes,
They call me on and on...

 
cyb
#665 Posted : 2/24/2013 6:00:06 PM

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Moderator | Skills: Digi-Art, DTP, Optical tester, Mechanic, CarpenterSenior Member | Skills: Digi-Art, DTP, Optical tester, Mechanic, Carpenter

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Painter is incredible...

Mastery is challenging... but worth the years...
Please do not PM tek related questions
Reserve the right to change your mind at any given moment.
 
Mr.Peabody
#666 Posted : 2/24/2013 11:02:49 PM

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Thanks spinCycle! I'll definitely give it a try. I've been diggin photoshop so far. My goal with that last one, and the one I'm working on right now, is not necessarily to make it look like traditional art, mostly I just wanted to keep the natural organic look to it. I have some ideas for PS that will fully embrace the digital medium, as well. There have been many times in the past I have tried to draw ideas, both from hyperspace and not, that I just was not able to do and I think that digital will actually help me be able to create them.

And thanks to Guyomech! Your tutorial threads have proved exceedingly helpful.
Be an adult only when necessary.
 
Guyomech
#667 Posted : 2/25/2013 12:20:53 AM

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Moderator | Skills: Oil painting, Acrylic painting, Digital and multimedia art, Trip integration

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Glad to hear it! Planning on a step by step painting tutorial very soon as well.

If any of the digital artists in this thread want to take a few screen grabs as you work and then create a thread where you explain your process, all such threads are solid gold.
 
soulfood
#668 Posted : 2/25/2013 1:47:40 AM

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Mr.Peabody wrote:
Here's a charcoal drawing (the original was posted a few pages back) I messed with a little with my new wacom tablet. I didn't want to get too crazy, so the colors are pretty mellow, and I have a ways to go with digital work. This is a long way from my first tries with the digital stuff! I definitely see the potential in working with computers to make art.


The whole dynamic is pretty damn delicious if I may say so? Of course I may! But I especially love how you've handled the lighting. The outer works have a near mystical darkness to them, but the minimal light in the middle adds just enough warmth to offset the piece just right.

Good job Thumbs up
 
Mr.Peabody
#669 Posted : 2/25/2013 6:58:13 AM

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soulfood wrote:
The whole dynamic is pretty damn delicious if I may say so? Of course I may!


I agree, it is completely appropriate for you to say so. I'm glad you did! I really appreciate your thoughts about my drawing.

And Guyomech,
I'll see what I can do about adding to the tutorials. I'll try to remember a few things I had issues with that can maybe help others, and add in a few techniques I have stumbled upon myself.
Be an adult only when necessary.
 
Enoon
#670 Posted : 2/25/2013 3:47:57 PM

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a wire necklace I made. I did the same thing with brass the second time to make it a bit more sturdy, but don't have a picture of it yet. This one is copper.
Enoon attached the following image(s):
IMG_0679.jpg (61kb) downloaded 303 time(s).
IMG_0676.jpg (42kb) downloaded 304 time(s).
Buon viso a cattivo gioco!
---
The Open Hyperspace Traveler Handbook - A handbook for the safe and responsible use of entheogens.
---
mushroom-grow-help ::: energy conserving caapi extraction
 
Pup Tentacle
#671 Posted : 2/25/2013 4:05:06 PM

lettuce


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nice enoon!
Pup Tentacle

You are precisely as big as what you love and precisely as small as what you allow to annoy you.
Robert Anton Wilson
Mushroom Greenhouse How-To
I'm no pro but I know a a few things - always willing to help with Psilocybe cubensis cultivation questions.
 
FallingAwake
#672 Posted : 2/26/2013 5:00:26 AM

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My first attempt at "visionary art" - inspired by my two experiences with the spice.

I call it "Pablo's Magic Theatre" after the character in Hesse's novel whom I sort-of encountered there Razz

 
cyb
#673 Posted : 2/26/2013 6:56:30 PM

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Moderator | Skills: Digi-Art, DTP, Optical tester, Mechanic, CarpenterSenior Member | Skills: Digi-Art, DTP, Optical tester, Mechanic, Carpenter

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cyb wrote:
Variation mardi gras...
"Carnivalle"



Love
cyb attached the following image(s):
cyb_Carnivalle.png (2,776kb) downloaded 490 time(s).
Please do not PM tek related questions
Reserve the right to change your mind at any given moment.
 
Guyomech
#674 Posted : 2/26/2013 8:19:43 PM

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Cyb- quite awesome... Don't know which of your two new ones I like best. The pattern flowing through them is very reminiscent of those inner spaces. I can see how you'd liken this one to a carnival or circus... I still think the other one looks like a view up the business end of a set of hyperspace rocket engines.

FallingAwake, that's a topnotch first effort. Lets see more!
 
olympus mon
#675 Posted : 2/26/2013 9:31:19 PM

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G-damn you 2 guys....just stop it! Too good!Thumbs up
When the hell do we get to collaborate on a real life 3d project....? Thats my question.
I am not gonna lie, shits gonna get weird!
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Tokapelli
#676 Posted : 2/27/2013 5:58:24 PM

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heres the first stages of the under-painting of Facescape. This painting has taken on a new importance recently with my grandma having a stroke. She is doing pretty good since then but it has made me realize that I may not have very much time left to communicate with her. The biggest gift she has ever given me is her wisdom, and that's what this painting represents so it think its right.

So let me know what you guys think. Im still pretty new to oil paint so I may have some questions for all the kick ass artists around here.
Tokapelli attached the following image(s):
Facescape.JPG (87kb) downloaded 413 time(s).
 
Guyomech
#677 Posted : 2/27/2013 7:05:50 PM

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Looks great so far. Only real advice I can give at this stage is to keep at it. Putting it on in thin layers like you are will provide a lot of control. I also think that an important feature of this (and of landscapes in general, especially distant ones) is to be very delicate with your use of contrast- go too dark and it will stop looking distant. Careful translucent applications are a good way to start, and as you gain confidence you can start loading up that brush a bit more.

Composition is solid; like the crop.

Good luck with your grandmother... I know that kind of thing can be tough. I wish I'd been closer with my grandmother in her final years, but her process of fading away was so gradual it became hard to tell if you were connecting or not. Cherish her awareness while you can. And make her some beautiful art to enjoy in her room- that's a good way of being present when you can't be there. My grandma said she wanted to be a hawk in her next life, so I made her a hawk image, soaring over a beautiful landscape. She was incapable of speech at that point but I could tell that she appreciated it.
 
Tokapelli
#678 Posted : 2/27/2013 7:10:32 PM

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thanks Guy means a lot man. yea the contrast is a good thing to keep in mind im gonna have some mist and stuff floatin around at the base of the mountains to help with that. i have a hard time with losing detail as i add thicker coats of paint so im tryin to avoid that by keeping it very tight and controled from the beginning. Ill keep postin progress pics already made some good progress since i posted that pic actaully. maybe so im not spammin up this thread ill make a new topic or put it in the frontpage collaboration thread.
 
spinCycle
#679 Posted : 2/27/2013 7:38:51 PM

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Tokapelli wrote:
heres the first stages of the under-painting of Facescape. This painting has taken on a new importance recently with my grandma having a stroke. She is doing pretty good since then but it has made me realize that I may not have very much time left to communicate with her. The biggest gift she has ever given me is her wisdom, and that's what this painting represents so it think its right.

So let me know what you guys think. Im still pretty new to oil paint so I may have some questions for all the kick ass artists around here.

Looking forward to seeing it progress. Oils are a wonderful medium, nothing really comes close to the translucence you can achieve by layering them, plus they can be worked slowly in a way that water and even acrylic mediums really cannot. If I had a separate studio space I would love to work with them again, but I cannot live with solvents in the air.
Images of broken light,
Which dance before me like a million eyes,
They call me on and on...

 
Tokapelli
#680 Posted : 2/27/2013 9:28:58 PM

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^yea I know what you mean they are a bit more of a hassle. Im actually just painting that in my tiny little studio apartment that I live in with my girlfriend. I use turpenoid which is pretty odorless so its no problem. I used to have my whole basement as a studio but were kind of in between places right now so space is very limited. Although one benefit of my current situation is that with the painting and all my stuff right there in the living area/kitchen/bedroom, I find myself working on it more than I would if I had to seclude myself to the basement to work.
 
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