Friday, October 30, 2015

Brooklyn — Animal Final


4 comments:

  1. really nicely done!! I love your texture with the feathers they're really convincing! The colors are really nice too. The right wing feels a little bit unfinished, around the yellow part of the wing and with the darker blue spots. It feels like you ran out of time (I did too haha). This seems to be a bird of prey mixed with a peacock, which is interesting because they have two completely different purposes. One is to look pretty and stand out, the other is to blend in and strike victims. Really cool design! Great job!

    ReplyDelete
  2. really nicely done!! I love your texture with the feathers they're really convincing! The colors are really nice too. The right wing feels a little bit unfinished, around the yellow part of the wing and with the darker blue spots. It feels like you ran out of time (I did too haha). This seems to be a bird of prey mixed with a peacock, which is interesting because they have two completely different purposes. One is to look pretty and stand out, the other is to blend in and strike victims. Really cool design! Great job!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Great textures!

    In the good name of brevity, and going off of previous comments, I would soften up the edge on that right wing, and possibly in a few other places to keep it consistent. After all, feathers are soft, so they would probably blend a little optically.

    If I were you, I would just duplicate the layer and play with the Gaussian blurs, erasing back into into the original. I find that doing that is a little more refined than just using the smudge tool, but again, that is just my preference.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Great textures!

    In the good name of brevity, and going off of previous comments, I would soften up the edge on that right wing, and possibly in a few other places to keep it consistent. After all, feathers are soft, so they would probably blend a little optically.

    If I were you, I would just duplicate the layer and play with the Gaussian blurs, erasing back into into the original. I find that doing that is a little more refined than just using the smudge tool, but again, that is just my preference.

    ReplyDelete