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The Digital Painting Process

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Revision as of 07:40, June 9, 2022 by SolarBot (talk | contribs) (top: replaced: ''Bart Simpson's Pal, Milhouse #1'' → {{Cmc|Bart Simpson's Pal, Milhouse|1}})
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Before and after

The Digital Painting Process is a process several Simpsons Comics posters go through, from the set up to the finished product. This follows the Evolution of an Illustration, which is where the product is drawn as pencil art. A walkthrough of this process was released on the Bongo Blog in April and May 2012 for a pin-up released with Bart Simpson's Pal, Milhouse #1.

Stage One[edit]

The pencil art is scanned into a computer, and a file with multiple layers is created, so that one part of the image could be painted without the other parts being affected. There is a layer for each element of the pin-up, with each having a temporary color to distinguish it from the others. This allows to separate the line art on to its own layer, so that none of it would be lost in the coloring process.[1]

Stage Two[edit]

The background color(s) are chosen, in the Milhouse #1 case, a fiery palete. In the foreground, the placement of light and shadow begins to establish. In the example (seen in the gallery below), the Ogre in the lower right would have the front of his body hit by light, and the back of his body would be in shadow. The hordes of monsters in the background would remain completely silhouetted.[2]

Stage Three[edit]

The colors are picked and rendered. In the Milhouse #1 pin-up, note the multiple levels of rich shading added to the moons. Also, the red-hot highlight on the edge of the cliff helps tie in the fiery backdrop.[3]

Stage Four[edit]

The rendering is nearly completed, and stage four depicts the colors with the line art layer turned off.[4]

Stage Five[edit]

Line work is put down to accentuate the details, and more depth can be added to the piece (e.g. foggy mist), which can accentuate the mood of the colors.[5]

Stage Six[edit]

Final details are added (e.g. Milhouse in bed with Puppy Goo-Goo, and the juxtaposition of the two styles helps contrast Milhouse's fantasy life from his real life.) Finally, the Matt Groening signature is added and the product is completed.[6]

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]


External links[edit]