I did some sketching in my journal this morning, including this one of a character in an old idea for a story of mine--I was telling my son the story. Scanned this one in tonight and did some shading in Art Rage. I'm 35k words into my current book, the first in a new series. It's a near-future thriller, and I've been saying I don't think I'll write fantasy again. I've moved on--to the future. (I think I said those exact words several times at Boskone). But you know how it is, a good story grabs you and won't let you go, demanding to be written. So, I'd put money on seeing this character in a book in the...near-future.
This was my secret project (Revealed!), a commission for a 9 x 12 foot wall mural for a steampunk cafe, opening in Brooklyn later this year. I started it at the end of November. Finished it over the weekend.
Here's a peek--keep in mind the real one is HUGE--9 feet high by 12 feet wide. Click the pic for a closer view. Hope you like!
Calling all iPad owners!
Seaborn—the iPad app—is a book and art platform for the stories, illustrations, paintings, and author notes created by me (Chris Howard) for a collected set of my works—the novel Seaborn, the graphic novel Saltwater Witch, and Seaborn's sequel, Sea Throne. Also included: character studies, timelines, maps, character lists, sample audio chapters of Seaborn, art portfolio, short stories, and chapters from the SF thriller Nanowhere.
Okay, that's the formal description of the app. It's also a discovery effort to develop the necessary components of a mobile author and artist platform.
I wanted to create something that makes it convenient to get to an author's or illustrator's work, especially the creative side-stuff we do that doesn't always have a home, some of which appears in our blogs, they're slapped up on image-sharing sites, scattered across the universe. Two things I heard over and over after Seaborn hit the shelves: "I wish there was a character list included in the book", and "how do you pronounce names like 'Kallixene'?"
My ultimate aim is to build something that brings it all together in a place that's always available—with the base assumption that very few of us go anywhere without a mobile device.
Be warned: version 1.0 has a couple embarrassing typoes--fixed in version 1.1, which should be ready for download in a few days. Version 1.0 is up now. Go get it. Grab the update when Apple pushes it to iTunes.
I'd really like some feedback on the contents, layout, the scrolling panes for Saltwater Witch, missing features, everything.
To go along with the app, I've updated the Saltwater Witch comic site, moved everything over to the actual SaltwaterWitch.com site.
Here's a set of app screenshots:
Yeah, like far away. For instance, I started with a pen in my journal with the general idea of something flying and ended up embarking on a study of Steampunk Restaurants. Sure, it's not much of a study yet, but it's a start. Below is my first piece, Aircowboy Bob's, a restaurant out of the American West where the menu consists of just about anything that can be hunted—and forget about vegetables. You know, a "the food's brown, hot, and there's plenty of it" sort of place, where the BBQ smoke is so thick, it's like you've pulled a twelve hour shift behind the counter every time you eat there.
Aircowboy Bob's Dirigible Diner
Just the ink...
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Or, as I would have called this post if there was enough room: Nazca's All-Nite Diner, open 24 hours, coffee and good food for all Captains of the Heights, the brave men and women of the Blue Forest Air Corps and East Shadow Dippers. Best pizza this side of the Orn Gulf.
And all painted on an iPhone.
Here's the first in a series of tutorials to share some of the things I do when I paint with the Brushes app on the iPhone (everything here also works on iPod Touch). These aren’t in order, although I might consider some more important than others, or maybe a better way to put it: some of these are work-for-me-but-may-not-work-for-you kinds of techniques, while others are just things to try, and still others are general use and I’d advise using them no matter who you are.Or just start fiddling and see if a story shows up on its own. Start with a blank Brushes canvas by hitting the + sign. Open up the brush size dialogue and slide it right, to the largest size. Pick a color, any color, and keep the transparency slider somewhere less than the middle. (You can also slide the brush selector to the bristly one--my favorite).
Start painting. I like to make some broad strokes across the background, usually at an angle, sometimes angling both sides toward the middle giving it looking down from a great height sort of lines, sometimes zig-zags or ocean waves. Pick a direction and paint. For now, try to cover the background without lifting your finger—this creates an even tone with the selected color and transparency. The fun stuff starts happening when you lift your finger and paint over the previous paint you just put down. This is where the brush transparency plays an exciting role, laying down a less transparent stroke with the same paint color. Try leaving some white space, try different transparency settings and colors—unfortunately Brushes doesn’t currently support blending, smearing, color mixing, but it still allows you to do some wonderful things with transparency.I think it depends on what you’re drawing. It may make sense to create a new layer and use the smallest brush to outline a figure, the horizon, ocean waves, or a 24-hour diner in the treetops. Then on another layer, use a broad brush to fill in with solid color—again, use transparency to your advantage. I rarely use a full solid color unless I’m drawing lines with a tiny brush. You can also do some fantastic shading and reflection with the transparency down very low and then going over a shaded or highlighted area repeatedly.
I'm painting something inetresting for this set of techniques, and here's what I started with, a background with a few colors and then some defining with the smallest brush:
I pictured trees, giant blue trees with an airship-catering all-night diner a hundred meters off the ground.
I drew the basic structure of Nazca's All-Nite Diner, and then started adding details, lights, some bracing--with shadow and highlight using a nearly transparent brush:
Technique: Finger-painting works better than a stylus
You may not think so, and I didn't either when I started out with Brushes. I bought a stylus, used it for a few days, and have never picked it up again. If a stylus works for you, use it. I think the perception is that a stylus (a pen like device for drawing on the screen) will give you accuracy, better fine line drawing, and while I think this is generally correct, there's a serious downside: it affects the way I use Brushes. While painting I'm constantly hitting the Brushes toolbar buttons--undo, layers, brush sizing, colors. In a typical work I'll hit undo five hundred times or more, I'll change colors and brushes a hundred times, roll through a hundred layers. The stylus quickly became a pain to flip out of the way every time I wanted to select buttons, colors, and anything else. And with a little practice I've found I have everything I wanted: accuracy, pressure/touch sensitivity, and easy access to the toolbar with my fingers. Fingers work better. Try them out.Use it like it's keeps your heart beating. Paint with the boldness of grizzly bears on Red Bull, because you can always undo anything you paint. This feeds into the next technique on using layers. I can't tell you how many times I've created a layer just to see what something looks like, then if I don't like it, I'll trash the whole layer. Another tip that fits with this is to create duplicates of your work as you go. When I get to a settled point in the painting--and there can be ten of these along the way in a single work, I'll click the "Done" button, and in the lower left, select "Duplicate Painting." I've only gone back and started with an earlier version four or five times, but it's a peace of mind thing--knowing that if I somehow crap up a painting, I can always go back and start over with a good copy with layers intact.
Technique: Sometimes you can’t undo
Get used to this. You’re pinching and expanding the canvas, painting, hitting buttons, more painting, doing all kinds of things. And sometimes you’ll paint a line you don’t want and you won’t notice it until you’ve flattened the layers and you’re a hundred paint strokes on. What you can’t undo, you can paint over. Maybe this isn’t a technique all on its own, but I wanted to call this out as something that is going to happen. I do it all the time. Painting along, everything looks lovely, and there’s a thin orange line through the center of the work. The only thing you can do is create a new layer, use the dropper tool to set the color next to the offending paint, and paint over it with little or no transparency.Technique: Use hundreds of layers
Create a new layer for everything, a new highlight, shadow, new figure, every cloud in the sky. Give them all layers. Brushes currently supports five layers, so make new ones and flatten as you go. When I paint in Art Rage, Painter, or Photoshop, I use dozens of layers. I just keep adding new ones as I proceed through a painting. I know some artists--when they use Photoshop--like Stephan Martiniere (www.martiniere.com) go through a hundred layers or more on most works. Crazy cool.Here’s what the layer panel looks like:
Click the + to create a new layer above the currently selected layer (that’s the one with the blue outline). With layers, you can draw at different depths in your painting. The checkboard pattern is the layer’s transparency—this won’t show up in your work, but lets you know what’s solid and what’s not—what’s going to show through any particular layer from the layer underneath it.
Click the down-arrow to merge layers. Brushes currently supports five full layers, and if you need another you’ll have to flatten the image a bit. Over the course of a painting I will run up to five layers and flatten twenty or thirty times.One final note on image quality: Brushes allows you to download and create a high resolution rendering of any .brushes file, which is essentially a store of every recorded brush stroke for a work, with all its attributes, including color, transparency, layer, etc. For a quick copy of your work you can also have Brushes send a lower res version to your camera roll and from there, email it to yourself or sync the images with your computer.
This is a low-res copy--nice enough for posting, but it gets a bit jagged when blown up.
Started this one last night, the intrepid Lady Sarah Waldegrave on one of her many journeys to the Eyer Waste--or whoever you want her to be, just made that up on the spot. Wherever she's going, she's dressed for something interesting. Painted this on my iPhone with the Brushes app.
SF & fantasy author of Seaborn, Illustrator of steampunk cities, software engineer
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