- cross-posted to:
- pixelart@lemmyloves.art
- pixelart@kbin.social
- pixelart@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- pixelart@lemmyloves.art
- pixelart@kbin.social
- pixelart@lemmy.ml
After bingwatching all of Brandon James Greer’s videos, I draw my first character: Babalisa.
Criticism and advice are more than welcome.
Palette: Nanner Jam Palette by Nannerman
Reference: “Two Peasant Girls” by Vladimir Makovsky
The name is a reference to Baba Yaga and Vasilisa.
I was wondering why it reminded me of Brandon James Greer’s layout/workflow. It’s nice, I think you did a good job with refining the details the way you wanted it. I think I prefer the second to last face more, in terms of thinking, as the last seems a little more angrier than trying to figure out a potion. But I also am particular to no mouth for expressions at times.
Thanks for the feedback!
Indeed the format isstolen froma tribute to Brandon James’ art :).I agree that the last version ended up with a more “determined / serious” look than a “puzzling / thinking” one. I was afraid that the second-to-last was hard to read, her right cheek could be seen as the nose and that makes it really weird. But if seen correctly, I also agree that it’s more charming.
One thing I’ve always struggled with tradicional pencil drawing is that the more I work on something, the more it looses the original charm. I thought it was related to the pencil texture, but it also happens with pixel art. I really liked the first pose (the stick-figure one), but once I added the clothes, I was unable to replicate it :/. Now that I look at it again, I think I should have tried a tiptoe stance.
It’s just a thing in art in general, going from sketch to finished will lose some fluidity. It’s hard to introduce that back in.
Looking good 😍