Gracie

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I’ve been working almost exclusively back on Illustrator for the past month. I always loved it, but I encountered a few frustrations with it in the past in being unable to achieve the depth or shading or texture that I really wanted to achieve. When I finally migrated over to Photoshop on the Cintiq, I found that I really missed the absolute control and precision that vector lines give me. To me, the pen tool in Ps just isn’t anywhere near as intuitive nor as clever as in Illustrator. Pathfinder is the tool of Gods! There is nothing I can’t create or get as close as is humanly possible to with my shape and line using Pathfinder.

My old frustrations with the lack of depth and variation in line and form in illustrator have been largely solved with new techniques. I like to ‘draw’ my lines more openly in Ai now. I rarely ‘close’ the shapes any more. Instead, I prefer to leave the lines open as they would be in a pencil drawing, add my brush to each one and tinker with it until I get the shape that I want, then use pathfinder to tidy up and get rid of my scrappy bits and leftovers. It’s a long and sometimes tedious process, and the outcome is a completely different aesthetic to what I would normally paint over in Ps – but I am more and more pleased with the results. 

Since I’ve been trying to work on more character design lately, I went for more pin-up practice this month. I decided to import my vector work into Ps for some touch-ups here and there and simple masks (mostly because I was feeling too lazy to get out the tablet and actually hand-draw any shading), and I kind of like the results. Here is a close-up:

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And here are some of the process stages from beginning to end. I decided to add a removable skirt on for posterity (since she was originally designed to be wearing a sort of 1950’s prom dress).

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I based the  digital on this original pencil line drawing, but afterward I changed the proportions significantly, especially the size of her head and hands.

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I’ve discovered that looks vaguely Betty Boopish on paper looks a little bit like Alien Vs. Predator in the cold hard light of Vector. That was it for this week. Hopefully I’ll be more productive next week 🙂

Signs and Stickers

Bridge, 香港, Harbour, Hong Kong, Signage, Signs, Stickers, Taxi
Hong Kong 香港 Claire O'Brien Illustration
This week, I didn’t get a whole lot of drawing done. For whatever reason, I just wasn’t feeling very productive. But it wasn’t for lack of inspiration – I have some of my best ideas while I’m on the commute to work in rickety old mini-bus climbing one of HK’s hills at 80 km an hour.

Mini update…Chinese Opera!

Beauty, Beijing Opera, Cantonese Opera, Chinese, Chinese Culture, Chinese Opera, Costume, Hong Kong, Make-up, Opera Masks, Peking Opera, Theatre
It seems to me that 2014 is going to be a year of obsessing over things that I just HAVE to draw. I haven’t been this prolific in a long time, despite working full-time and having a crazy commute to and from work.
My latest thing is Chinese opera. It’s taken me a while to get to know Hong Kong properly, and I think for the first time I can say that I do love it. It is a very exciting and interesting city to live in, and I will be sad to say goodbye whenever I do leave. There’s so much colour, everywhere! And reference materials all right there on my doorstep. Temples, pagodas, markets, ponds, koi, parks, boats, statues…I’m realising how much I do want to study and accomplish before I move on, so I know that I’ve made the best of this amazing opportunity to gather my thoughts and get my work together. 
Cantones, Chinese, Peking, Beijing Opera, Opera Masks, Chinese Masks, Chinese Mask illustration, Claire O'Brien, Claire O'Brien Illustration
I don’t really have much to show yet, but I drew these guys up last night and I was so pleased with them I just wanted to share them. They’re not exact or even close adaptations of actual masks – I wanted to explore with colour and shapes so I put my own spin on them instead. I really like the idea of doing a series and I want to see if I can make some full-blown illustrations based on the performers themselves (along with the huge list of things I’ve already decided to draw). 
Hopefully I’ll have more to post up soon 😀

Oldies but Goodies…

Adorable, Children's Illustration, Time for Tea, Uncategorized
Wow it’s been a couple weeks already since I’ve posted and I have no idea how that happened. Well, maybe. There’s this post by Aminder Dhaliwal. I find her comics hilarious 😀 Yet another happy example of how my extreme super-sleuthery portfolio huntingness has been useful (thank you, Twitter). 
So I’m still working on that top-super-incredibly-fanstastically-super-duper-wooper secret project that I can’t talk about yet in case I jinx it. Let’s just say it’s not my first one, but I hope it’ll be my first actually completed one. And it may or may not rhyme with ‘look.’ But that’s it! That’s all you’ll get out of me. I am the Dobby of Secret-keeping. Wait. That probably wasn’t a great example. 
The wonky blue piano that started it all off…
In the spirit of posting-up-slightly-old-work-and-pretending-like-it’s-current-so-I-don’t-get-such-massive-blog-guilt Guilt, here are some animation backgrounds I did for fun the past couple months. The first two are for a concept I dreamed up about five months ago about a colour-coordinated Russian Blue cat to while away the time while I was having a hard time. Making everything blue made me feel a lot better. So that’s what I did. 
Look Familiar?
Here’s why!
So anyway…here they are! I still haven’t written the full script but I thought it could be a fun little short. The idea is that Pru (the Russian Blue) only likes everything to be all one colour, and she hates it when they mix. So she tries to change everything up to make it all match. But that doesn’t really work and yadda yadda yadda *meaningful life lesson learned* I don’t feel that guilty about admitting that I didn’t put too much thought into the story itself yet. I really just felt like drawing a blue piano and the room kind of built itself around it. I might finish it one day… but for now it goes on the heap of ‘to-do’ projects that live on my desktop. Sorry, guys.

This was before the era of the wonderful Cintiq baby I had in January, so I hadn’t mastered the technique of texturing yet. This is just good old-fashioned flat-as-a-pancake vectoring, baby. Old school style (well, since 2005 anyway). Pre-January 2014, I did everything by photographing (not even scanning) a hand-drawn sketch, and then using my trackpad in Illustrator. You can imagine how long that took me. 
Here, I was trying out some new things with the lighting (spotlights? In a Victorian house? Really?) which I know make not a lot of sense but I kind of felt like it. And everyone knows I always end up just doing the thing that I felt like doing anyway, so I thought I’d give it a go and see what it ended up like, for the sake of experimentation. I do like it, but trying to achieve any kind of volume or depth with 100% true vector art is always going to be challenging, especially when it comes to more rounded forms. In there, most of the forms are pretty straight but I wanted to mess around with perspective a bit. I have some friends who are graphic designers and when I showed it to them, they both said I could have pushed it further, made the forms a little more asymmetrical and wonky. I have to agree – so the next rooms I end up doing will probably end up being even more out there. 

So now I’m in a better place (with a new job)  I’ve kind of gone the opposite way and find myself getting less time to draw since I’m trying to be a productive member of society. I’m still fighting to get my portfolio together with all of my finished pieces, but I’m kind of limited to one or two days a week for now. Which means my drawing rate has significantly slowed down for a little while, at least. So…some oldies but goodies, right? 
I really liked making things in this style. This is kind of where I started from before I went towards a much looser style (massively influenced by Mary Blair and Eyvind Earle) with this practice piece:
Into the Woods
And then I kind of fell into a hybrid way of working with this one, which I posted up before, for the medicine shop. I like mixing pixel and vector art, it’s fun. I still haven’t found my groove yet, because I’m experimenting with whether I want to add textures to my vector pieces, or whether I want to actually draw part of them in photoshop and part in illustrator, like I did with the one below. 
The Medicine Shop Background
I think both approaches can be fun, but it is harder to get the two to blend seamlessly unless you have either very strong lighting (cue the overhead lamps) or an overlying series of textures that will help to sort of ‘push’ the vector back so it doesn’t stand out to much. The crispness of vector is something I absolutely love and hate all at the same time. I made the chinese medallions and background elements entirely in vector. (The medallions were inspired by some reference materials I found online). Then I added the atmospheric effects and texture in photoshop. The counter was originally vector too but I enjoyed the way it looked when I painted over it by accident so I decided to keep it that way. Yay for happy accidents! 
I really thought I would have played the ‘old stuff posted up again’ card already here but I guess I haven’t. So. Here you go. Hope you’re having an Eggerific Easter! (I’m know, and I’m not sorry). 

Sketch Book Saturday

Adorable, Children's Illustration, Cute, Frolic, heart, Little Girl, Picnic, Puppy, Scan, Sketch, Sketchbook, Sweet, Teddy Bear's Picnic
It’s been a busy time!
We had our annual musical production this week at work, and it was all hands on deck. I was in charge mostly of costume design for the principal cast, which was a lot of fun but time-consuming (and stressful). So unfortunately this week was so busy and I found myself so tired from all of the running around that I didn’t have much time to draw. I feel my portfolio glaring at me from under the pile of books and coloured paper on my couch for being so unproductive.
Just so I don’t feel too terrible, here are some old sketches I did in the summer just before my holidays. I coloured up one way back in January, but I’m not too crazy about it (it was my first attempt at using the tablet). My friend Ashley liked the first one so much I decided to gift her the original (since I insist on handmade presents for everything and am then officially the worst in the world at finishing them. Sorry Ash). Since I’m going to frame the originals and send them away to new homes,  here are the (slightly fuzzy) scans. Have a happy Saturday!

Girl Dog Puppy Cute Sketch Autumn Harvest Frolic Free Playing Children Sweet Scarf Boots Gloves Woolly Hat
Autumn Frolic

Little Girl, Picnic, Teddy-Bear, Teddy Bear's Picnic, Dolls, Pretend, Bossy, Child, Children, check blanket, cute, adorable, illustration, children's illustration, children's book illustration
Teddy Bear’s Picnic

Time for tea? I hope so!

Alice in Wonderland, Behance, Dribbble, Kettle, Post card, Tea, Tea party, Teacup, Teapot, Time for Tea
Whew! Well that was a stressful evening of waiting up until 4am, anxiously glued to my computer and screaming blue murder at the maddeningly slow browser bar as it inched s-l-o-w-l-y forward. The good news is, I think I almost-maybe-not-quite-sure-but-possibly have achieved what it is that I set out to achieve. Which is, for now at least, top-secret. One of my pet hates is allowing myself to get over-excited about something only to have my hopes dashed at the last minute. So now I officially adopt an approach of what I like to call Realistic Optimism.
tea party, tea, tea cups, cuppa, Alice in wonderland, kettle, teapot, tea pot, time for tea
What I can share today though, is the good news that I got invited to Dribbble! Which probably means nothing to most of my friends but is kind of like a portfolio sharing version of twitter for designers and artists. When you’re on it, you can like and comment on each other’s work, and you can also look for jobs, etc. It appears to be a lot more in the vein of graphic design and web design than I thought, so it stimulates a different creative side of me, which I kind of like 😀 Also, you need to be ‘invited’ by an existing member of the community before you can post your own work or comment. I thought this might be a major problem since I didn’t know anybody on it, but luckily a very gallant member who also happens to be on Behance (if you’re an artist and you’re not already, GET ON IT. I might make another post about that one on it’s own, it’s that good) invited me, and now here I am! 
In honour of this, I made a little post-card with some of my cut-out designs from a previous background illustration I made, because let’s face it – if you’re Irish (who isn’t?) you probably love tea. 
Shall I put the kettle on? 🙂
Teapot, Tea-cup, Tea, Alice in Wonderland, Tea party, cuppa, fancy a cuppa? fancy a brew?
Time for tea? 

Sizzle me timbers! And in other matters, sketch submission sites.

Bacon, Cassette, Fried, Model, Pin-up, Portfolio, Sizzle, Sketch, Submissions, Tape
Sizzle, sizzle, bacon twizzle.
I really like drawing pin-ups. I don’t know why this is. I do know I played with Barbies until I was 11(…ok 13. But who’s counting, right?). I find them fun to do. Almost as much fun as my new obsession…sketch websites. Oh yes. The ones where you have a daily or a weekly or a fortnightly or a yearly topic and everyone sends in their sketches and then it’s a whole barrel load of fun where you get to comment and like and look at eveybody’s submissions. I love them. Which brings me to my next obsession…portfolio stalking. 
Yep. I love spending hours and hours and hours trawling around on the internet looking for other artists and going through their portfolio books to see what they’re at. I can’t tell you how excited I get when I find one that I really like. I get really inspired by it and I also like the feeling of connecting with other people who are as obsessed with drawing as I am. I think I should have a secret second occupation as a talent agent, I’m that good at unearthing. Maybe something to think about…
Anyway! Yes. Today’s post. Based on this week’s theme for Illustration Friday (which is kind of cool and I think it might be one of my new favourites). You can find them here: www.illustrationfriday.com or you can check out their partner website Illustration Age at: www.illustrationage.com. I also love sketchdailies, but even though they have a website (wwws.sketchdailies.com), it’s actually much more fun on their twitter feed, where you can see the sketches and artwork rolling in on a minute by minute basis. It’s like Christmas come early if you’re a portfolio sleuth (!) like me. 
This week’s topic for Illustration Friday was Sizzle…and feeding into my current obsession with drawing long-lashed girls straight from the chorus line at the Copacabana (it’s a real thing) I decided to draw a pin-up. Wrapped in bacon. Even though I don’t personally eat Oink Oink or Moo, I am still partial to a bit of bacon-y smelling goodness. Happy Tuesday!

Sizzle Close-Up

More mid-century doodling

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Is it just me, or is there some kind of a Renaissance happening in the illustration world? Every which way I look I can see illustration and design that is so influenced by mid-century styles it might have even come from that era. Yes, I am also guilty! I’ve always loved it – I can still remember vividly the handed-down picture books I had at home that kept me coming back over and over again. I love detail. I love busy images. I love over-saturation, colour contrast and really striking palettes. I love hyper-stylization the way that hyper-realism used to be my jam all the way through art-school. 

Much as I do love it (and there are some crazy-talented designers and illustrators that I LOVE to follow just for the joy of their line-work and unique use of colour), it kind of feels like the market is reaching the point of over-saturation. I really hope it doesn’t get to the point where clients are so sick of looking at things from so many designers all influenced by the same big-name greats they start hating it…because that would ruin one of my favourite things.


And when I think about artists I really admire from that era, I know they were deal-breakers, scene changers. They changed the way we think about illustration today. They defined one of the biggest institutions in global illustration and animation today – Disney Animation Studios. I hope that some day, people might look back on the great illustrators from my generation and think the same way about them. 

laying down the colour for my gingerbread house. I’m not sure I want to keep the pretzel window, it’s a bit clumsy. I’m really happy with the way the wood beams turned out, though. 


Anyway! After indulging myself in my growing collection of post-war and mid-century advertisement and illustration prints, I now have sooooo many things cluttering up my desktop that have yet to be coloured (or that I’m just not sure I like enough to actually keep but still can’t bear the thought of deleting). So….here they will live, in their new home in blogger land 😀 I liked how the Hansel and Gretel house has started to come together with colour and some texture, so I might eventually finish that one. The others are just doodles I don’t think will amount to much more than that. Among the million others I have yet to complete….