Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Buzz vs Alien

Buzz vs Alien
Moving on from the previous post with a similar theme I created this idea of Buzz Lightyear meeting an Alien. Again I was thinking of a more gritty image trying to bring Buzz into the world of Alien, maybe landing on the planet and discovering the species himself.

There's not enough energy in this initial sketch, I wanted the alien to be thrashing while pinned to the floor by Buzz's foot. He's logging the information on his communication device and covering the alien with his laser weapon. In the background is the alien ship can be seen.

The composition needs some work but as an initial sketch it gave me ideas to take it forward... Thanks for viewing...

Saturday, 23 November 2013

Emperor Zurg Idea

Emperor Zurg Idea
Back again... bit of a break from posting as I've been busy, however I thought I'd post this old idea of Zurg from Toy Story. I wanted the sketch of Zurg to be a scary version of the movie character. It was an interesting idea because I tried to use the key elements of Zurg and try to push a little realism into them.

The left side of the image shows the original sketch which certainly had a menacing look with those teeth, but the next version on the right (3D) didn't really capture what I was looking for. I think the reason for this was because I tried to jump into a 3D sketch model too soon.

So my plan here is to take it back a step, work on the sketch and then take it into 3D-Coat for voxel sculpting. I want the final to be a 3D model that I can texture, the aim being to mix organic elements with hard surface modelling. The over-riding idea being a scary version of Emperor Zurg - a kind of what happens if you mix Gigers Alien with Pixar approach. Thanks for viewing...

Sunday, 10 November 2013

BEDOUIN TRACKER HELMET DETAIL

Helmet Detail
An important element of the sketch was trying to make the character look more alien or at least not from our planet. I set about working on the helmet design focusing on the shapes, the idea here was to make the helmet itself a sensing device, filtering the air and sampling changes in temperature, light etc.

This was created in Photoshop using my own custom brushes, I then painted in the details from the generated shapes. The green visor was added at the end to give the helmet a tech feel. Nasal sensors and an oral filtration unit were added over the mouth to taste the air, as well as listening probes mounted high on head frame.

Although I imply the character wears a high tech body suit, the main emphasis was the helmet in terms of tracking ability. Whether the character is to be biological or a robot is something I'm still thinking about. However having this high tech character wrapped in the flowing desert cloth does work well and is something I'll keep in the final piece.

I think what needs to be addressed is the composition and the pose of the character, I lost something in the translation from initial thumbnail sketch to the current version in terms of pose. The hand holding the sand  has no gesture and you don't feel the character is examining the sand, which is important. Another element that needs to improve is the story behind the artwork, it should be easy to read the artwork and the events within the scene. This will be addressed in the further revisions. Thanks for viewing...

Saturday, 9 November 2013

Bedouin Tracker Concept


The left image shows the original sketches, which started the whole idea. Very simple but enough to start the trail of thinking mentioned in previous post. I actually liked the black figure more as the pose implied a character with more energy. I opted for the other because the character seemed a more seasoned, experienced hunter.

The image on the right shows a later development sketch of the costume. I liked the flowing tails on the costume and kept this in, but I wanted the design to be more alien or at least not like something of our planet. All sketching was done in Photoshop, some custom brushes were used to give more texture. The left hand was originally intended to hold a spear like the black & white sketch. This changed later to the idea of a sand storm shield. The right hand also lacks the interesting hand pose of the sketch when the character examines the sand... next post...


Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Bedouin Tracker

Bedouin Tracker
This sketch was result of a few influences such as the movies Lawrence of Arabia, Pitch Black and Dune. One of the aspects of the movie Dune, which I really liked was the Stillsuit worn by the Freeman.  This design concept in the movie itself was really well executed and I wanted to combine this idea of a special suit with the more traditional clothes worn by those seen in Lawrence of Arabia. The long flowing clothes gives a sense drama and helps to identify with the harsh environment of our own deserts here on earth.

In the movie Pitch Black the characters crash land on a planet that was really interesting in terms of lighting, the intense lighting used in the movie gave a sense of how another world could possibly look. With these things in mind I set about designing a costume for the main character.

The initial thoughts for the sketch was the idea of a ship crash landing on a desolate planet and the occupants survived. Wandering off into the desert, little did they know that they were being tracked.
The Bedouin is seen scanning the sand and holding what was originally intended as a sandstorm shield. I decided later to change this into a piece of wreckage from the ship - this needs improving to read better as wreckage.

I tried to make the planet look alien by creating some strange rock formations also including the twin suns and large distant planet. This all needs working on. The main focus which again needs improving was the head gear, costume design and how the costume flows in the sand storm. The wreckage distracts the viewer at the moment and the whole composition is flat needing more depth and attention to what I want the viewer to see first, second etc... Thats all for now... thanks for viewing.




Thursday, 31 October 2013

Space Helmet (part 2)

Space Helmet Design Detail
Continuing from the previous post, I worked on this design further detailing design elements. I don't think the design itself works particulaly well, but there are elements which I liked. What interests me here is the mixture of the hard surface shell and the glass visor, however the angle of the helmet would be very uncomfortable.

Also the seal of the helmet is not addressed and is obviously very important to maintain pressure. So there is much more work on this design that needs to be done. Hopefully I'll get some time to work on this, but I think my strategy would be to revert to the previous sketches rather than try to rescue this version.

I pasted a Poser character's head into this illustration to show some scale and position of the head inside the helmet design. Its interesting because it immediately forces you to reconsider and re-evaluate the design from a ergonomic perspective... ah well back to the drawing board, literally!

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Space Helmet Concept

Space Helmet Development Sketches
A selection of sketches showing the development of a space helmet concept. This one started of with some random brush strokes using various Photoshop brushes, I wasn't to sure of the direction of the design at the beginning. It was a case of figuring out the visor direction as a way orientating the design. Once that was done the rest started to fall into place.

I think with this concept however the above sketches had something dynamic which I lost in the next, more detailed sketch ( I'll post the detail sketch next ). I may take this design back a few stages before I progress any further.

As you can probably see from these 3 the design elements were driven by the shapes from the Photoshop brushes. Once you orientate your eye to the apparent 'mess' created by the brushes then it becomes more of a decision making process of  "OK this shape could be the backpack, this shape is a breathing tube." etc... Those decisions can be good or bad in terms of design choices, with my design being the latter :)

Friday, 25 October 2013

Cyborg paint over

Cyborg paint over
One of the things I find interesting as an exercise is to listen to movies for inspiration. Movies can give a very strong visual cues for artwork, we see this all the time with fan art. I've got nothing against fan art of course, but what I like to experiment with are the more subtle cues from the movie dialogue itself.

Let me give you an example of what I mean. I'm not quoting word for word here (there are many that can I'm sure) but in the original Terminator movie the character Reese explains to Sarah Conner about the Terminator. He explains to her that underneath the skin there is a heavily armoured combat chassis and we finally get to see it later in the movie. The key word for me here is chassis,  because it has interesting connotations when thinking about design. The Terminator has an endoskeleton chassis. My sketch was based on an exoskeleton and the thought of this cyborg hunting a person down with this aggressive, light-weight chassis was interesting. The lack of emotion is helped by reducing the head to something without facial detail or expression.

There are elements in my design of course which are lifted directly from Stan Winston's superb Predator (the shoulder mounted tracking weapon) and again the lack of facial details which I explained in my earlier post being West World inspired. The left arm shows some skin to remind the viewer of the human parts used when this cyborg was created.

So the technique here is very simple, I used a photograph as reference for the pose and did a paint over job to explain the concept of the chassis. It's only at a development stage, but I have enough information in this sketch to take it forward. The goal is to create a 3D model in LightWave 3D and create a final render. Hope you found it interesting.


Thursday, 24 October 2013

Development stages from Poser to Concept
This is a breakdown of the previous post. Beginning with the Poser Render, 3 lights were setup, 2 intense white lights either side of the head and a central negative light. The render is taken into Photoshop and ran through filters, with layer blend modes. I looked for interesting shapes and forms and then started to paint in and erase. Towards the end of the process its a bit like sculpting.

The interesting thing about working like this is using black and white to begin with, because it eliminates a lot of information, forcing you to focus on the design early on in the process. The concept of using lights to sculpt form is the key ( especially the negative lights ) to getting the random results with the filters.

Ultimately you have to look for those visual clues in the development stages which take you on the journey to developing the character, costume etc. Hope you find it useful, comments, questions, general chat welcome.

Anohter Head Helmet

Costume / Helmet Design
This design is an old one which started off as a render in Poser. I used a succession of filters in Photoshop then to distort and warp the original to look for shapes. I then cut and pasted some photographic elements, which were painted over and worked into the design.

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Helmet Design Test

Helmet design sketches  using Photoshop and Poser
This was an experiment using Poser and Photoshop. Its a technique that uses Photoshop brushes to block in shapes from a series of images I generate in Poser. The manual paint over at the end just refines the result of playing with the brush shapes. The one on the right is a little too Predator-ish, but its good fun. The left image is more interesting to me because of the lack facial detail, which always freaks me out. I think its from when I saw West World as a kid, the cowboy robot without a face. Oh the mental scars do surface when drawing...