This post will contain all the material that I produce while working on the 2nd chapter of my comic Lunatic: from thumbnails and sketches to finished pages. Lunatic is a wordless story, with one image-per-page.  I’ll add new material to the top of the post as I do it.
April 19-May 5: Crawling to the Finish Line
Other nuisances of life interfered, and it took me ages to do the last page I had to do. Â Not actually the last page of the story, but a transition page, to indicate that it’s morning in the last sequence. Â It’s a repeat of an image I’ve drawn twice now, of the exterior of the girl’s house, roof, chimneys etc. Â I’m getting kind of bored of drawing it, so I want to come up with something fun to do with this “morning” version. Â A different angle, to begin with. Â First, a light pencil sketch, just for composition:
Then, 10 DAYS LATER (!) (Really, I had other things to do. Â Or was it the boringness of the page that kept me from getting to it)…. a couple more sketches:Â
Thinking of ways to make it interesting, I think of using masking fluid to define the clouds, with a light wash for the sky, shading the clouds to show the dramatic light of the sunrise. Â A bunch of wash studies:
Letting the ink wash pool up at the bottom (on the tilted drawing table) accidentally makes that “burst” effect happen when it dries. Â I decide to try and make use of that for the sunrise itself.
On to the final version. Â The masking fluid is gooey stuff and hard to apply with precision. Â I don’t really want to muck up a brush with it, so I used a pencil eraser to draw the cloud shapes with it:
Brush on the washes, sloppily so that it pools up just above the roofline.
Et voila!
Once this is all dry, I peel off the masking fluid, so that there is a white edge to the clouds, with the darker shading in the middle.
Ilm not sure if the wash effect feels like a sunrise… or is the building on fire?  But I’ll go with it for now.  It doesn’t have the dramatic lighting that I want, though… so I add more gray wash to the front of the building, and some cast shadows on the roof:
Good morning, right? Continue reading ““Lunatic” – Chapter 2 – The Process”