You are on page 1of 20

Variations

Teapots

Table of Contents
Contrasting Hues Lines and value Life In Green Variations Converse Learning to Draw With Shapes 2 4 6 10 14 20 30 32 34 36 38

Converse Variations p. 20

Line Drawings Using Adobe Illustrator (Screenshots) The Artists

Teapots p. 6

Life In Green p. 10

Variations p. 14

All About Me (magazine editor/artist)


Screenshots p. 34 Allison Horn BLOG- See my process MAGAZINE- Product

Variations

Contrasting Hues

Amy Duffy Amy Duffy

Shawnita Montgomery

Giovnni Diaz

Creating depth with lines, shapes, and color...


Tom Zwarycz

Lovette Fernandez

Since we were dealing with hue for the class, I used the colors green and orange (green and red would have been too much of a contrast and would have looked too much like Christmas). The background was green and the objects were orange. I had to create two separate layers so that the background would be separate from the objects. When it came time for value, I had to play around with different levels of transparency since light and shadow are not opaque on objects, but they are the effect of how the shadows respond to light. I started making the objects by building them up with only lines to the point that they became solid medium orange in hue. Then, for the value, I gradually introduced lighter oranges and darker oranges to create 3 dimensional

objects. There was enough contrast from the darker green background to the orange in front that it caused the objects to stand out in front of the background. There were two objects to draw in this piece. One had the stick in it sticking up very high and the other one was much shorter. I wanted to be able to create the images to look natural, even though I used a lot of line gestures. I even drew in shadows at the bottom to ground the objects in their surrounding space. I wanted to show several students versions of the same object.

Robert Furlan

Roxy Wasiunec

Variations

Variations

Lines and Value


Drawing With Lines

Synthia Wesley

Christian Rosales

Allison Horn Roxy Wasiunec

These drawings are part of the exercises we did while learning to use Adobe Illustrator. Only lines were used throughout the entire piece, ranging from small 1 pt font lines to large 10 pt font or even larger. To begin the process, we started with a small font and only drew lines through the object, using a medium gray color and not paying any attention to the outlines. We had to do that as much as possible until the object was so full of lines that it was becoming solid. Then we had to switch to a bigger size to purposely fill the entire object and make it a solid mass. Once we had the shape down, we had to use lighter and darker variations of gray to begin creating value. By the end of teh process you can see how the images begin to obtain value and mass, even though they are not very realistic because of the sketchy lines they possess.

Nice Krajecki

Lovette Fernandez

Variations

Variations 5

Teapots
Abstract Teapots
A good way to get warmed up is to draw familiar objects over and over again. Teapots were used in this exercise. They are drawn with thin lines, thick lines, the number 5, and by using many other methods. The shape of the teapot does not form until later on in the process, and in some cases the finished product looks nothing like a teapot. It does not matter though. These exercises are used to warm up your hand before beginning to draw more concrete work where you actually start forming the correct shapes even more, and begin to add volume and can see al the curves and lines much more than you can in these abstract shapes.

more teapots!
Teapots
Adobe Illustrator and the paintbrush tool iwere used for the teapots. I drew the ones using outlines first a couple times, because that is the main way beginners learn how to draw--they repeat the shapes they see. The ones I drew that are filled with lines are sometimes more interesting to me, though, because they suggest volume. Using curved lines gives you an idea of what areas of an object bulge out or curve in. I have been drawing for a long time, so I am surprised I never used that method until about half a year ago. When someone looks at the drawings, i want them to be able to know they are teapots. I want there to be a sense of volume and shape as well.

Image: Allison Horn

Image: Allison Horn

Allison Horn Editor of magazine and artist of Teapots

Variations 6

Variations

more teapots!
(Text by Allison Horn)

2
In picture #1, the teapots are composed entirely of the number 5. The number is repeated over and over again to fil out the entire object. In shaded areas there is more of an overlapping of 5s.
Robert Furlan

This is another drawing using only lines. You do not get a great sense of mass because there is not much overlap and the lines are pretty much straight, rather than curved. However, you get a clear definition of the shape.

Amy Duffy

These are line drawings of teapots. The lines used are fairly thin. Again, repetitive use of making lines is what causes mass.

Here are more teapots created with using the number 5. She did a great job at lining them up perfectly at the edges of the shape. You can also see the areas that have shadows.

Christian Rosales

Roxy Wasiunec

In picture #1, there re contour line drawings and regular line drawings that give the teapots mass. It is easier to see the shapes of the objects in the two that are at the sides at the bottom, but they are relatively flat since they are not filled in.

These are line drawings, contour and ones filled in. The ones filled in have a lot of mass. They almost look as if they are baskets, or the lines are woven together as the material in baskets are.

Nico Krajecki

Synthia Wesley

Variations

Variations

Life In Green
I picked different colors, than the original, to sort of catch the eye of the audience. I also picked light colors and dark colors to make the backboard pop up and look 3D. -Giovanni Diaz

Giovanni Diaz

Lovette Fernandez

Student Quotes

I continued using Adobe illustrator to change the general feel of the original image. I made use of software tools such as the gradient and color swatches. -Tom Zwarycz

Tom Zwarycz

Christian Rosales

I created a monochromatic picture, but this time I introduced gradients into it. I wanted to play around with the gradient to give the image a three-dimensional effect. -Allison Horn

Amy Duffy

Variations

10

Variations 11

more life in green...

Nico Krajecki

Green
Here are more versions of original illustrations in green. You can see how everyone started by using a green color then made sections lighter and darker to cause the drawings to have value and to give them a three-dimensional quality.
Robert Furlan

Synthia Wesley

Jordan Juarez

Variations

12

Variations

13

Variations
(All text by Allison Horn)
The first piece is the shape drawing of a train with heavy strokes around it. I like this piece because when I look at the outside of a train I think of clouds of smoke, and the illustration here also makes me think of smoke because of the organic, black, smoky lines around it.
Amy Duffy

Variations

I find these two beach basketball illustrations to be quite amusing. The first one has a sketchy orange stroke sround areas of the piece. To me it represents fire. It looks like fire is burning the basketball hoop, rim, the beachball, and even the telephone wires. I really get the sense of the burning and movement as if it was a photo taken when a fire was being lit.
Giovanni Diaz

Christian Rosales

This downtown scene to me is more unique than ones I usually see. I normally see tons of buildings, flashy lights, crowds of people, etc. In these interpretations, I get a feeling of solitude, especially since there is only one person visible in the illustration. Also, there are only a few buildings and street lights in sight. The perspective and all seem very real, which also makes this an interesting piece to me. I think another reason I like it so much is because it has a surreal effect to it because this scene does not look like what there normally is downtown.

The smaller image is a great representation of reality. I can feel the sun hitting the gray of the hat. The bigger image just has a nice contrast and looks so cartoon-like. However, I love the color combination. They are colors you do not always see together and it is a unique combination, which is why I like this piece so much.
Jordan Juarez

Variations

14

Variations

15

more variations
The bigger drawing is a good representation of a chapel. lso, it has an effect to it that makes it unrealistic. The smaller drawing has an interesting color combination. It looks like colors a building would actually have, but colors that I do not see people noramlly use when drawing (or creating) an image of a building.

...

Robert Furlan

Lovette Fernandez

I love how these pictures contain a lot of information, such as texture, perspective, realistic color, etc. In one picture, the word Ollivanders loos almost crystal-like and very unique. In the smaller picture, there are dark shadows, most likely created by using the gradient tool. It adds a mysterious effect to the piece.

Nico Krajecki

The first image contains a lot of reality. It looks like an actual shoes. There is even areas of light shading to show where the shadows would be. I like the variation created of it with the bright green stroke. What better way to make the image pop than to put a stroke around it that is the same color as the shoe just a much brighter version?

Once again, these shoes also have a realistic effect. There is enough detail so that you can see what type of shoes they are and where the shadows are. The smaller image is an interesting variation. It is more colorful than many other images I have ever seen. It basically looks like a rainbow splattered over the original image.

Roxy Wasiunec

Variations

16

Variations

17

more variations
I like the smaller image of the buildings downtown. It has a comicbook effect because of the heavy black, sketchy strokes and the colors. To me the colors even tell what time of day it can be. The intense redish-brown can either signify sunset or early dawn.
Shawnita Montgomery

...

Tom Zwarycz

I think the first image here is outstanding. If I do not look too close to it I can actually mistake the picture for being an actual photograph of a house. There is amazing details, such as the bricks and in the bushes. The small image is a great interpretation. It looks like a nighttime image...on Halloween.

The first picture is fun for me to look at. I love how the black shoe has texture. It looks like it is a type of plastic leather (or pleather). The colors work well in front of the tan background. I think the small image is fun too because it is basically the foreground images made darker with a bright cotton candy-like background.
Synthia Wesley

Variations

18

Variations

19

Converse
Variations
What my converse mean to me...
I played around with lines, colors, and textures to create the images. I wanted to play around with color so I used the Impressionist color palette in the swatches library. I did not want to create too much contrast so I used colors that are similar in some way (blue, purple, and red). All of my variations are simply my converse shoes. I did not intend for people to think of anything specific when seeing them. Viewers can view them any way they want. I chose to use my converse because they describe who I am since they are part of my style. I always make sure I buy a new pair if my old ones are all beaten up and are not worth wearing anymore.

Image: Allison Horn

Variations

20

Variations

21

Using Color...
Warm Color Palette
I did the same thing in this picture as I did in #2, except this time in warm colors. I made the entire image a reddish-pinkish color and I used oranges for parts of the shoe (in the laces and in the interior of the shoes).

Image: Allison Horn

Cool Color Palette

I wanted to experiment with different color palettes in my variations and my first one involves using the color blue. I wanted to make the subject stand out so I used lighter blues to make the picture of the shoes pop out. The background remains a darker blue, allowing it to fall back in space.

Image: Allison Horn

Variations

22

Variations

23

Using Adobe Illustrator For Making Variations

Illustrations...
I used the pen tool to create shapes and I used a camera to take a picture of the image I was going to create. The converse shoes are obviously the main subject of the piece and they are sitting right in the center of the page. They are set on a step stool and there is a sense of depth since I made a wall in the background. I wanted the viewers eye to focus first on the shoes and probably follow along the wavy laces, then to look towards the background. The subject is a pair of shoes. That is what I want viewers to be able to recognize. Everything surrounding then will be more clear once I add more detail because right now it is hard to tell what the shoes are setting on.

My first attempt at illustrating my converse. Image: Allison Horn Image: Allison Horn

Using Adobe Illustrator


Above Image...
The top image is a screen shot I took while creating my converse illustration. I start the drawing by bringing a photo into the program and i trace the lines with the pen tol to make shapes.

Side Image...
This is a picture I took of my converse. I made sure there was good lighting so I can get good contrast when creating my composition. I made sure there was natural light because that way the picture will be much more clear and easier to recreate when beginning the illustration.
Photo I took of my converse before creating the illustration in Adobe Illustrator. Image: Allison Horn

I used the pen tool and played around with the gradients in Adobe Illustrator to cause my image to look more realistic. The shoes are placed in the center since they are the main focus, and there is a sense of dimension that is created by the shoes sitting on the step stool and by the door in the background. I wanted to play around with the gradients because I feel it really helps the image look closer to real life so that the lights and shadows are blended together rather than looking all choppy. I tried to make the image look as close as I can to reality so that people can recognize the converse and think they look realistic.
My revised version of my converse illustration. Image: Allison Horn

Variations

24

Variations

25

Using Strokes...
Again, I was playing around with different possibilities of using strokes. I made another subtle piece, where the strokes do not overpower my original illustration. The purple simply outlines the parts of the shoes. There is also an extremely subtle darker purple outline around the lines of the background setting.
Another stroke illustation. Image: Allison Horn

One version of using strokes around my image. Image: Allison Horn

Now I decided it was time for a more drastic change. This time I using color even more with the strokes.

I thought it was time I tried playing around with something other than just the color. So, in these few pieces I decided to use different types of strokes around the objects in the illustrations. In this piece I wanted to start off simple, not making any drastic changes. In order to obtain the image without changing it drastically, I chose to use a couple different colors that are a little similar to my main photo I am placing the strokes over. Brown and red might not be the most attractive color when placed together, but I think those colors effectively work together in not taking too much attention away from the shoes. I feel that the large chaotic lines work well with the picture because it implies movement, as if the shoes just got dropped and slammed down onto the step stool.

I feel that the large chaotic lines work well with the picture because it implies movement...

Another stroke illustration. Image: Allison Horn

Variations

26

Variations

27

Wildcard
Two Different Views
In these two pictures I wanted to see how they would look with a bunch of different textures, so I looked through all the different possibilitie and create compositions I thought looked interesting. I also took into account the colors because I still wanted the shoes to remain their black color and have a nice contrast with the background. In the first image I kept the shoes as they were without texture, and for the second one I added textures.

An Extreme Wildcard

My converse with only the background having texture. Image: Allison Horn

There is still a sense of reality in both images because they are all real objects I imitated in my illustrations. However, you can easily see that adding lots of texture takes away most of the elements in the piece that cause it to look real. This is demonstrated by looking at the first image. Using gradient and shading really makes the shoes appear three-dimensional.

I went a little crazy and scary with the texture in this piece. Image: Allison Horn

Variations

28

The converse with texture. Image: Allison Horn

It was about time that I broke away from making my illustration look similar to how it already was. To do this, I decided to go crazy with several different textures... ones that do not even match my picture in color or anything. The placement mixed with the colors gives me an uneasy feeling. I did this so viewers can think of whatever they want when viewing the composition, but I get several different reactions from it. When I see the intense goldish-yellow step stool I originally think of a desert. I think this is because of the sand and dryness that deserts are known for. Also, the black scribble lines on the shoes look sharp and uncomfortable. This also relates to the desert for me because of cacti, which is something I am afraid of, even though there are some in my own house. I put the oddly colored background simply so that it makes the picture feel awkward.

Variations

29

Learning to draw

with shapes...

Nico Krajecki

Allison Horn

Allison Horn

Synthia Wesley

Roxy Wasiunec

Drawing the shoes was one of the earliest exercises we did in the Computer Grahics class and it was the first shape drawing exercise we did. For me, it was the first shape drawing I have ever composed in Adobe Illustrator. The first drawing on the previous page (the one by me) is the most complete one displayed here. I did not know about the gradient method yet so it is created purely out of shapes of color. The illustrations of the shoes that follow mine are incomplete ones by other students and you can see the process each student went through to begin creating the drawing.

The car illustration is also by me. It is the second drawing I have ever attempted in Illustrator. I began by starting to draw the interior of the car, since basically everyone otehr shapes is going to be overlapping it. Then I moved on to the hood of the car, then the wheels and then the exterior. Since this was simply an exercise, I felt that it was not necessary to complete it, even though I did spend a little of my free time trying to make some improvements. I wanted to construct most of the drawing in the least amount of time possible. To achieve this I did not work in any details until I had the majority of the shapes completed first.

Variations

30

Variations

31

Line Drawings
Teapots pouring

Shawnita Montgomery

Shawnita Montgomery

These are actual line drawings not created on the computer. They are of cups, teapots, and other objects that hold water. They are created in a similar fashion to the ones created in Illustrator, excpet they are done in rather ink or pencil on paper. In this exercise we were limited to using 100 lines. Because of this, we had to be carefulhow we used the lines and where we placed them. There are some areas of the objects that have no lines whatsoever, and there are parts that need a lot more lines because there is so much shading needed. We were able to use hatching, as well as cross-hatching, which is a common technique used in shading with using only lines. Crossing lines gives drawn objects a shading effect.

Tom Zwarycz

Variations

32

Variations

33

Using Adobe Illustrator

Screenshots
The green and yellow drawing is another take on the pictures ou have already seen before. The two screenshots below show another progression of an illustration being made. The one to the left is before the main house is put in and the one to the right is after it is put in. The finished product is shown earlier in this magazine.
Tom Zwarycz

The images abouve are screenshots of the exercise shown earlier in this magazine. The orange foreground contrast nicely with the green background. In this screenshot the swatch color window was left open so you can see the variety of shades and hues of color that were used.

The image to the left is of a desktop with a notebook, paper, an Ollivanders wand case, etc. Obviously this is a variation of the original though--it is not the realistic original version. This is the high heel shoe illustration I created as an exercise for the Computer Graphics class. Since this is a screenshot, you can see teh tools that I used and how the image looks while it is still in the program.

Robert Furlan

Allison Horn

Roxy Wasiunec

These three pieces show the progression of how the illustration was created. In the screenshot to the left, you can see that first the background was created. In the middle image there is one shoe that still has not been drawn over yet (the right one) and there is one that has been drawn over already (the left one). The imageto the right shows how it looks so far.

Allison Horn

Here are my converse illustrations once again. The one to the left is the original one I created to make it as realistic as i possibly could. I took advantage of using gradients and several colors mixed together. The one to the right is my variation using the Impressionist color palette.

Variations

34

Variations

35

Work from the class

The Artists

Allison Horn

Amy Duffy

Christian Rosales

Giovanni Diaz

Jordan Juarez Lovette Fernandez Roxy Wasiunec

Not listed..
Robert Furlan Tom Zwarycz

Nico Krajecki
(These images are previously used in the magazine.)

Shawnita Montgomery

Synthia Wesley

Variations

36

Variations

37

ALL ABOUT ME
I am a Studio Art major at Saint Xavier University. The class in which I made this magazine is the first Computer Graphics class I have ever taken. However, I do have a little previous experience with InDesign because I work as a Copy Editor for the school paper, the Xavierite. The type of art I mainly do is drawing. I like drawing and sketching with pencil or charcoal. Adding color is interesting but I like the effect that black and white gives off. When I graduate I would like to work as a police sketch artist, especially since drawing is my strong point in creating art. My second option would be to work at a gallery because I would be surrounded with several different works created by artists. I HOPE YOU ENJOYED MY MAGAZINE!!!

(Studio Art major at Saint Xavier University)

Allison Horn

Allison Horn

Variations

38

Variations

39

You might also like