May 13th:
I fleshed out the dragon just a bit.
May 13th:
I fleshed out the dragon just a bit.
May 12th:
More work on Nathan's dragon drawing cut-up sketchbook page.
May 7th:
A little more work on the page of my cut-up sketchbook that my nephew drew the initial image on.
March 22nd:
My nephew is really into Minecraft, so I used some perler beads from my sister's craft supplies to make him a 3D Minecraft Cube and a 2D Minecraft Zombie. Then I made my niece (the Disney Frozen fan) a 2D snowflake and a 3D Minecraft Snow Cube. Then, just for the heck of it, I made them some hot glue stars.
Then later, at rest time, I drew my nephew some 8-bit style dragons on graph paper:
March 21st:
I unofficially finished page 25 of the Cut-Up Sketchbook.
Then I colored this scene in a Disney coloring app on my sister's iPad:
I unfortunately do not remember the title of the app in which I created this image, but it was one of those officially licensed Disney products. They provided the outlines and pattern design: I just colored it in and told the pattern brush where to go.
February 25th:
Just before Christmas of 2014 I visited my sister and let my niece and nephew each draw on a page of my cut-up sketchbook. I left it entirely up to them what they wanted to draw. My nephew, Nathan, drew a dragon and my niece drew what I can only assume is a fanciful galaxy of some sort. She wouldn't really tell me what she was drawing: just that she would make it pretty. The drawings are located somewhere between pages 30-40 of my sketchbook, so I won't officially get to them for some time, but I couldn't resist doing a bit of work on them on a day when I was thinking a lot about those kids.
My strategy regarding the pages with the kids' drawings is to leave all of their work untouched, but to do my own work on every bit of white space they left blank on the page. I want to incorporate their drawings into my own designs in a manner similar to that in which I incorporate the existing patterns on the patterned pages of my sketchbook, but with the intention of respecting the integrity of their drawings much more than I do the printed images.
My work in the above image is all of the tiny patterning set between the marker strokes in the head, arms, and torso of the dragon.