Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Thursday, August 12, 2010

The Firebird in the Golden Cage






















This is a piece I did years ago, but it fits this week's Illustration Friday topic so well ("Caged"). The medium was colored pencils and the inspiration was a combination of the allegory of the firebird and the fairy tale "The Golden Bird." The fairy tale always made me angry because the "hero" was some prince who got a happy ending through luck, even though he took absolutely none of the good advice he was given until it was too late. Repeatedly. The title character, the golden bird, was just another piece of treasure that the prince ended up with by the end, even though it was the bird that really started the whole story when it stole a golden apple.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Soul-eating goodness

(edited to move the pictures up to the top and the account of my misadventures in business license-acquiring down)

Good news! I picked up prints today of some of my older pieces, and they are very pretty! The printing place does really nice work.
Going to post small scans here because I'm so excited. They're not as nice as the prints themselves, but what can ya do?


























Haven't been able to work on my fairy drawings in a few days, which is sad because I got inspired by the weekly prompt over on Illustration Friday (this week's prompt is "early"). The last two days have eaten my soul.

To get a business license in this city, I need to include with my application proof that I have registered my business with the state. I have already registered with the state, so no problem, right?

Wrong.

If you don't think you'll make above a certain amount of money (I think the likelihood of my success is pretty slim, so I'm in this category), you don't actually need a state license, you just need to register with the state that you're exempt. However, the state doesn't issue verifications of exemption, apparently, and there is nowhere on the secretary of state's site that I can find to print this out. I spent 15 minutes holding with a city receptionist to verify that not only do I need some sort of proof that the state says I'm exempt from registration (which is itself a type of registration...), the city cannot tell me how to get it. So after waiting half an hour (those who know me will suspect exaggeration here, but actually I'm playing it safe; it was half an hour of waiting after I decided to start timing it like 10 or so minutes in) on hold, a state employee was able to tell me that 1) The state does not issue proof of exemption, no matter how required it is by the city, 2) The state website should totally have a button there that allows me to print my exemption status (she was not able to tell me where this magical button is), 3) I should not be angry at her for calling me "ma'am," despite me asking her twice to stop that because (despite all the silly chatter about fairies I do on this blog), I in fact am a dude, and 4) I should not be upset with her because it's completely unreasonable of me to expect that she can assist me with state business license-related problems (I had called the state's business license-related number).

Depressing true government stereotypes are depressing.



Sunday, May 23, 2010

Not awesome

I used to draw fairies when I was little, and it's funny that even then I was pretty much convinced that fairies just standing around isn't really interesting enough. Why, then, did I think I'd be much more interested in fairies doing nothing but striking glam poses (which I suppose is marginally more interesting than just standing there looking blank, but not actually interesting as such)?
I give you Exhibit A.














(all the writing and color splotches are notes to myself about opacity and brush size for the layers, and what color I was mostly using)
This is about as far as I got before I decided that this was too boring for words. Not having drawn fairies in years, I'm glad I started this to give me an idea of what frost fairies would look like, but I think it's time to up the ante and start over on something that's actually worth looking at.

It begins

After a (three or maybe five mile, we really aren't sure how far we went) really long hike, a shower, and some pie (oh, delicious pie, I love you so), the great work has begun! I started work on a picture of frost fairies. I couldn't decide if I wanted to do a male or a female (hey, fairies can be guys too...assuming fairies require two genders to reproduce, which, admittedly, is a bit of jump for mythical creatures that presumably use magic [for flying, at the very least, given their tiny wing-to-body ratio]), so I decided to do both. Behold the first step of the process: the sketch and preliminary palette.














It's pretty hard to tell (or so I'm told), but the one on the left is the dude. I figured fairies probably aren't too butch. Butch doesn't seem very aerodynamic.