This reference pack is for all creative types, artists, photographers, 3d modellers and bloggers. Inside this reference pack you will have access to all of my unedited high definition photos of the stunning natural environment and wildlife I came across, from the perspective of two different countries, Brazil and Argentina!
Read MoreHow I Painted The Digital Portrait of Christelle
A couple of years ago I completed what I considered to be my best digital portrait illustration to date. I finished a realistic portrait of Christelle, an ex co-worker of mine when I was living and working on The Gold Coast, Australia.
Christelle is from France, and at the time that I worked with her, she was interested in areas such as spirituality, mindfulness, present-moment-awareness, the natural world, health & fitness, and areas such as yoga and meditation.
At one point I decided I wanted to paint Christelle’s portrait, but I wanted to add something to the piece and make it more illustrative, instead of just painting directly from a photo.
Going Digital
My portrait of Christelle is a digital portrait. Now for those of you who don't know, the same knowledge and method of drawing and painting is mostly applied and transferable over into digital drawing and painting. If you are unable to draw using a simple pencil on paper, digital tools will not come to your rescue, and it will not miraculously make your work better. You can learn to draw with digital software, but you can’t expect to suddenly just start creating quality art if you do not already have pre-existing knowledge of the fundamentals and practice under your belt.
There are however many benefits to working digitally. Digital is more forgiving with mistakes, you can for example escape/undo a wrong brushstroke and ‘go back in time’ when you’ve made a mistake. You can save and paint multiple versions of your artwork at different stages, try multiple different colour studies before taking one to final, and you don’t have to clean up paint at the end of each session.
Establishing Direction
Before starting a portrait or illustration, I take a few minutes to sit quietly and think about what it is I want to achieve, capture and create. This simple bit of planning early on is essential to help establish a clear direction for your artwork to go in, and should you get lost, you can always refer back to it and check where you are at in the process. So before painting, I grab a sheet of paper and a pen, and write down questions, and begin to think where I want to take my painting.
Digital Tools And The Step-By-Step Process
I mostly paint with Adobe Photoshop throughout the painting process, but sometimes I like to use Corel Painter, especially for blending techniques in the final stages of a painting.
When starting a digital painting, I open up Photoshop and create a new canvas. I like to start painting on a file that is not too big at first, and gradually increase the size over time as the painting develops. This prevents your computer from lagging and slowing down when making large brushstrokes on a high-resolution image, and allows for a smoother, more enjoyable workflow.
Once I’ve opened up the canvas, I sometimes like to fill the background with a colour to work on top of, to do this you double click the background layer in the layers menu, and then select the paint bucket tool, choose your colour and drop it down onto the canvas. From there I create a new layer which sits on top of the background, I select a hard round brush from the brushes menu, select a grey tone that resembles a pencil stroke, and begin roughly sketching in the shapes and proportions that make up the subject.
I then begin to start painting with colour, and I immerse myself into the painting process. I will show you some of the stages below.
In this early sketching stage I aimed at getting the main shapes, composition and likeness down early. I also introduce additional design elements into my composition.
The second phase of my portrait, the first colour pass. In this stage I aimed at getting the main colours down. I aim for a stronger sense of vibrancy in the colours/hue as compared to the original photo I worked on, where the colours seemed too de-saturated and faded.
At this stage I was getting closer to the finished painting. Having got much of the main colours and proportions complete for Christelle, I chose to focus on detailing some of the imaginary elements, decorating the painting and leading the eye through composition.
The idea behind this was appreciation for nature and present-moment awareness. At a time which is fast looking like something out of a dystopian future novel much like George Orwell’s 1984, we are becoming more and more locked into technology and forgetting to appreciate the amazing world around us. Just walk down the street and observe people on their way to/from work. If in the city center, I bet most are glued to their phones and not paying attention to the world around them in the slightest.
Getting much closer to finishing, I started working on detailing the focal point of the painting, which Is Christelle's eyes leading to the two butterflies. Again how often do we pay attention to the insects, the birds, the colours, sites, sounds and life around us? What can we benefit form it if we do? Can such a simple practice actually enhance our creativity and productivity in a fast-paced world?
How about we re-introduce a little more gratitude, awe, respect and appreciation for the little things around us. Even if it is just another grey, rainy, cold day in England.
So that’s it for this post, I hope you found some value in it.
I do have a digital portrait and traditional portrait painting service on my website for both colour and b&w paintings: https://www.robbieallenartist.com/realisticportraits
This makes a great gift for a loved one, a family member, or even for yourself. I can also paint and draw animals and pets on request. Please do share this to anyone you think might want to have a portrait done as a gift.
Thank you for reading, sharing and commenting. It all makes a difference and inspires me to keep making posts. If you have any questions, just ask.
Thank you,
Robbie
Digital Portrait Painting Process of Séilah - Brighton, U.K
Introduction
Hello everyone,
Firstly I would just like to say that I am both a traditional fine artist, and a digital artist. I paint in both mediums. But for this particular painting, the entire process was completed digitally. For more of my traditional work, head over to my painting pages on my website:
For my watercolour & gouache paintings; https://www.robbieallenartist.com/watercolour-gouache
For my oil paintings; https://www.robbieallenartist.com/oil-paintings
Some of which are available for sale on my website shop; https://www.robbieallenartist.com/plein-air-paintings
The painting process video link is provided at the bottom of this post, scroll down if you would prefer to watch that first.
Deciding Artistic Direction
In 2019 I was asked to paint my sister’s friend’s daughter as a gift for a family members Birthday present. Skye, who commissioned me for the portrait, chose for me to have the portrait painted digitally instead of traditionally.
I organised to meet up with Skye and her daughter Séilah, so that I could get a sense of her personality and character, and to take reference photos for the portrait. In the end we chose to use an already existing professional photo of Séilah, (the photographers name I’m not aware of), to use to paint my portrait of her. Meeting Séilah in person helped me to make decisions regarding what I wanted to do, and where I wanted to go with the portrait.
I chose to try and emphasise her natural curiosity for all things, her colourful and vibrant personality, and her innocence. She wasn’t even 1 year old at the time of me meeting her.
My Step-by-step Process For A Digital Portrait Painting
I started off by simply sketching Séilah and the surrounding material on a digital canvas using Adobe Photoshop with a hard round brush. I checked back on a number of occasions to check the proportions, and positioning of the drawing was accurate and true to the original photo reference. Once I had established the initial sketch, I then went on to painting the block-in, with big, broad, brush strokes, filling in areas of local colour and the mid-tones of the skin.
Moving Around The Canvas
Throughout the process I would move around the digital canvas, developing different areas of the painting, raising them up all together, gradually in more and more detail as I progressed. You can see this in action by watching my video below. This is generally considered to be a solid practice by many professional artists who I have studied from. Personally I find that it helps to keep the painting harmonious, I can paint more instances of ‘lost & found’, and I can mix in foreground and background colours in a way on the canvas that helps to create a better sense of realism. This exercise also serves to keep your mind and eye fresher for longer as your attention isn’t focused on just one area for any given length of time.
Useful Digital Techniques
I paint with a MacBook Pro and I hit the keys (command -, and command +) constantly to go closer and further away from the digital canvas. This digital technique ultimately emulates the real life process of constantly standing backwards and forwards from the physical canvas in order to see the bigger picture of the painting, keeping in control of the piece and being able to detect mistakes and better place new brush strokes with confidence. All of which leads to a more fluid painting process and less accident or error prone one.
This process I also find to be fun, creating a sense of enjoyment. If you get stuck on one area, why not move to another momentarily and come back to where you were before? You might just find that you can suddenly solve the problem with fresh eyes within a matter of minutes of not looking at it.
I also get into the habit of rotating the canvas using the ‘rotate’ tool on Adobe Photoshop, which I have set up as a hotkey under ‘r’. This again emulates the traditional art process of rotating the paper or pad on a surface on order to make cleaner and more accurate lines and brush strokes. This isn’t really possible when standing at an easel, however, making this an exclusive benefit of digital painting over traditional.
Below are more of the digital painting steps as the painting gradually progresses.
Getting closer to working on the final details in this step.
Applying The Final Details
And for the final image I refined the details further focusing in on her facial expression and adding some bounce colour in the surrounding material and drapery. I use a small brush size for the final steps, so I can get into the important areas around the focal point (the face and features) and also to clean up lines and edges where I see I think it is necessary.
I write my signature, save the files, back them up and call the painting finished.
Check out my youtube video above for more insight into the background and process of this digital painting of Séilah.
Thank you all very much for reading, watching, liking and sharing.
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© 2020 Robbie Allen Artist. All images and content (c) copyright Robbie Allen
20 Enjoyable End-Of-Year Review Questions
Hello everyone,
I created this post after first seeing the 20 end-of-year questionnaire up on the @dailypsych page on Instagram. I then decided to participate and write my own answers to the questions on the page, along with a recorded audio version and turn it into this blog post.