Hesperornis

This week’s illustration for the Animal Alphabets art challenge was an Hesperornis. I started out my sketches for this drawing using silhouettes. I don’t think I had tried this technique since college, but was curious to try this approach again after re-discovering it while trying out some digital brushes recently. While silhouettes might not work well as starting points for some drawings, I found that it work pretty well for this bird at least.

Einiosaurus

This week’s illustration for the Animal Alphabets art challenge was an Einiosaurus. Sometimes when I’m drawing I’ll do a quick experiment to change the shading layer to a different color just to see what it looks like. Most of the time it looks terrible, but this drawing was the rare exception where it looked kind of interesting so I ended up re-engineering the lighting for the whole drawing.

Boreaspis

This week’s illustration for the Animal Alphabets art challenge was a Boreaspis. Some of the reference drawings for this creature show small eyes, but I deliberately made them comically large instead. I’m hoping to draw the animals in this round of animal alphabets in a more humorous vein than my last set, so I’m betting that exaggerated eyes are going to become a regular part of these illustrations.

Alvarezsaurus

This is an Alvarezsaurus, a dinosaur that lived approximately 86 – 83 million years ago. I illustrated this animal because I’ve decided to take up the Animal Alphabets art challenge again. A refresher of how this art challenge works: The people who run the official Animal Alphabets twitter account name a specific animal to draw each week, and the artists post their completed work on Mondays at 19:30 GMT. The animals name corresponds to each letter of the alphabet, so at the end of the exercise I should have 26 animals to show.

The sub-theme for this round of Animal Alphabets is extinct animals. One of the challenges of the endangered animals series was gathering enough photo reference material to get the details correct. I’m betting there will be little to no photo references for these animals, and I can’t quite decide if that’s going to be a good thing or a bad thing yet. In the case of the Alvarezsaurus it was quite a freeing feeling to not have photo reference I must say.

Watusi’s Doghouse Funhouse #2

The panel above is from a two page comic I have in Dale Martin’s latest anthology book: Watusi’s Doghouse Funhouse #2. It’s a 48-page black & white digest with full-color covers and is available by mail for $7.00 postpaid from Dale Martin himself. My comic for the anthology is a short whimsical tale about books. I created this comic way back in 2010, but it’s now just seeing print for the first time. (I also had some work in the first edition of this anthology as well.)