Back to the Drawing Board


Monday, June 1st, 2009 at 8:52 am by Jamie

Every once in a while, you may find yourself looking back at your body of work and thinking, “What the hell is all this garbage?” Well, I have personally come to such a time and it is why there haven’t been any updates for a while. After years of screwing around with the computer to make life easier, I’ve decided to get back to basics with traditional media.

The catalyst for this desire to get back to paper and ink came with the end of Book 1 of Erfworld, the webcomic I’ve been working on for the past two years with my co-hort and writer Rob Balder. Book 1 is made up of 150 full color comic pages that I illustrated with Micron pens and colored in Photoshop. After 150 pages, I noticed that my drawing hand suffers from pain the longer I ink with the Microns. To alleviate this pain, I turned to inking with a brush. I’ve long read about professional inkers using brushes and dip pens to ink their work but whenever I tried either, the results were disastrous. Then I saw this video of Jeff Smith inking a panel with a brush and I got inspired!

I broke out an old brush that I had lying around and didn’t hate what I ended up with (sorry, bad camera phone pic).

Brush Messings

I decided that I would totally convert and ink everything with a brush. I went to the local art store and picked up a proper sable hair brush for home and ordered a Pentel Pocket Brush Pen which uses synthetic bristles instead of a solid nylon tip so I could ink on the go. I figured, “why stop there?” I used to do a lot of ink wash work in college? Why not try some watercolor?

I feel like I’m relearning how to draw again which is actually quite exciting. Inking with Microns and coloring everything in Photoshop became too much of a grind. Starting over using a brush to ink make everything new and interesting. Now inking rocks and bricks is no longer something I dread. And I’m using washes to shade things before I throw on basic colors in Photoshop. Eventually, I want to do colors in watercolor. But that’s going to take some time and experimentation.

I’m looking forward to this learning process and I want to share what I’ve learned. I’m planning on doing some more video tutorials around more traditional techniques so keep an eye for that. Have no fear, Monster Cutie is going back to the drawing board! Literally!


4 Responses to “Back to the Drawing Board”

  1. torsoboy

    Watercolors are really fun. I’m still getting the hang of them. I’ve been coloring some block prints with them, and the watercolor works really well with bold imagery in printmaking. It works really well for scenery too.

  2. Muffin Machine

    I went from the video of jeff to a few videos of Jim Lee drawing and then being interviewed by Stan Lee back in the early 90s. Check them out somewhere, I think they might push that inspiration a bit. The way Jim Lee inks is amazing and when he’s talking to Stan he talks about how learning to mime really helps him out. Honestly, taken seriously, I think that’s a huge insight. Anyways, good luck with ink. Watching you work has helped me out a lot.

  3. Mikey D

    I don’t see the picture you took… anyone else?

  4. Facebook User

    Aha! The pic should work. Although, it’s a crappy pic. I’ll have to scan it sometime when I remember.

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My name is Jamie Noguchi. I'm a freelance illustrator and this is my Monster Cutie. Check out the about section for more information on the site. For more about me, poke around the "Other Works by Jamie" links.

Monster Cutie updates once a week on Mondays. If you have any ideas for tutorials, articles, and features or would like to contribute, please contact me at azmnews@gmail.com.

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