David Petersen's Blog, page 13
May 30, 2023
House of Mystery: The War: PAINTOVER EDITS

This was only the second time I'd been hired to draw pages for a comic that wasn't Mouse Guard. I received a typed script from Bill, and I had to submit thumbnails (see to the left) and pencils (below) before getting to inks and colors.
In 2010 I shared the process for a single page of the story on this blog: https://davidpetersen.blogspot.com/2010/10/legends-at-nycc-plan-for-this-weekend.html

I didn't like what I saw. Every artist is more critical of their own work than most everyone else, and older work can intensify the flaw-view. But, I tried to put that aside because I thought to problems weren't so much "Oh, I could draw that much better now", but rather 'I lost clarity and focus in each panel that was present in the earlier stages.
This lead to present me doing critique paintovers of my own pages. I limited myself to fixing the compositions that were already there rather than imply a redrawing or completely different composition or panel arrangement. Below you can see the original colored page on the left of each image and the paintover on the right.

For panel two I tried pushing the light back and the shadow closer and vice-versa. I think I prefer the light in the distance, But I also prefer how I upscaled the flowers and plant growth in the darker background version.

Page 2: Scaling up the forms and leaving more open space for color (in the roses, rock, and stone wall) makes them much more readable.
I also wanted to lighten backgrounds around the cat and bird characters to make them more readable. I played with scale of the bird and the splash in panel three. The last panel is still a mess, but I do think pushing light in the background and offsetting some darker forms like the trees and turtle help make the panel less flat than it was.

Panel three needed depth. The only thing selling it in the original was scale. I for some reason didn't draw leaves (but instead cross-hatched a mass) which made it harder to push the birds inside a shaded canopy looking down onto the cats walking the path. Here I corrected with leaf forms and a better color/value scheme.

The last panel's depth was similar to before: more open forms of the roses, bushes, and wall--then a better lighting scheme. The old man and bench needed to be less front-on. It looked awkward. So did the floating book on his lap. And I liked the open lenses in the pencils, so I lightened them up. More bees and bigger ivy for the foreground.

Page 5: Better shadows on the man in panel one coupled with a lighter and less busy grassy area made a real difference in panel one. For panel two I did the normal to open up forms and depth––I also fixed his leg pose to give him more of a shuffle, and widened his cane.
Panel three and four saw the bird get upscaled, with better value compositions and lighting in each. Lighting plated a big part of fixing the last panels too. Pushing the depth (which also draws the reader's eye focus through the panel), enlarging the tree form, and adding bees finished the job.
I streamed these paintovers on my Twitch Stream: twitch.tv/davidpetersen and did so to show how I see growth in my own work, but also fixes and techniques for finding and solving what's wrong with a page.
If you'd like to see me do this kind of critique again, come to my twitch stream––I may do it again on another freelance short story I drew...
May 23, 2023
Stained Glass

Last October for our wedding anniversary, I drew the stained glass window Julia and I were married under in 2003.
(19 years and counting!)
I gave Julia the original inked artwork as a gift, but decided to color it just for fun (though I have been tempted to make stickers of it).
Below is a few steps of process for (re)creating the art for her.

When looking for a church to get married in, Julia and I attended one of their services to see if the Pastor & setting felt right to us. I think the woodwork and stained glass are a big part of why we opted for it.
Most of the photos I had of the window left the lead-work blown out. But I was able to find one from that day and a few more online that gave me a clear view of each section.

Using a Copic Multiliner SP pen or two (the 0.7 & 0.3 nibs) I traced over each bit of the design--sometimes adding in little broken & repaired bits for character.
I did miss a few of the lead lines, but I drew them in digitally when I was coloring the file.

For the final colors below, I added a bit of texture and tinted each individual piece of glass just a bit one way or the other compared to its neighbor so they all looked like separate pieces. I also added a color hold over all the lead to suggest light poring through the glass and blowing out the darkest darks to our eyes.
Would you want a 4" sticker/decal of this window? Let me know––enough people ask and I'll make it happen.

May 16, 2023
Oak Park Burned Down

My dad, who also grew up in that church, was the one who emailed to let us know and he took the photo you see to the left of the damage. His heart hurt at the loss and shared how painful it was to see it in that condition after the lifetime of memories associated with it as well as the structure itself.


And I really appreciated how beautiful the trimmings were. We had several ornate large illustrative stained glass windows, one of the largest functional pipe organs in the area, murals and stenciled wall painting by Elmer 'Bud' Peterson (no relation), and carved woodwork everywhere: the wall paneling, the communion rail, the pulpit and lectern, the alter, the vents for the organ––even our speakers & hymn number plaques!


When I started doing my own stained glass work after college, I incorporated some of the fragments into portraits I made for my Dad, Mom, & Grandparents. Sounds weird to say it, but I wish we'd stolen a lot more from that church.

Most of the photos we ever bothered to take were of that second kind of beauty––the kind that is meant to last forever.
Below are some of those photos including paraments my Mom made for the pulpit and lectern, the rose on the alter the Sunday after my birth, and my Dad decorating the Christmas tree we donated from our back yard to the church that year






May 9, 2023
Floral Fish Dragon

I worked on my piece live on my Twitch stream while viewers worked at home and then on Monday we shared our finished pieces.
Here is my finished colored Dragon. And below are my steps to create it as well as the community submissions.

This month the prompt was only two words: Fish & Floral.
I opened a few tabs of google image searches of Fish (specifically beta fish) dragons and flowers (specifically Marigolds).

As I said above, I looked at Marigolds for the flower reference. For the arms, I wanted this to seem more aquatic, so they are a vestigial level of weakness––in fact the next row of limbs back are more like floral fins with arms. I ran out of paper before I added the single horn, so I drew it off to the side of the paper, scanned it, and assembled what you see here in Photoshop.
I then printed it out so I could do the tighter pencil drawing you see to the left on top of it on a light pad.

I taped it to the back of a sheet of Strathmore 300 series bristol. Using a lightpad, I was able to see through the surface of the bristol as I inked the dragon. I used Copic Multiliner 0.7 SP pen to ink the art.
Line quality and texture was my way of making sure the different parts of the dragon could be read apart from one another. Also varying the density of those textures helped sell the depth & distance.
I wasn't able to finish the inks before my stream ended and wished the viewers all luck with their pieces and told them we'd take a look at everyone's work on Monday.

After some dinner, I came back up to the studio and finished inking the piece as I listed to a true crime podcast. Once the inks were finished and scanned, I let the podcast play and started the coloring process. That first step is to flat in the colors––basically professional coloring-in-the-lines.
Knowing the Marigold reference, the flower petals were that dark red orange. I liked the idea of making the fishy bits echo the colors of a Marigold's stem.
I added color holds (areas where I want the black inkwork to be a painted color) to the flame & the eye.
For the final colors and all the highlights, shading, and texture I used the dodge and burn tools with a stock photoshop texture brush. Below you can again see the final rendered dragon.















May 2, 2023
Mouse in a storm

Here is the commission all colored, but I will go through the process for this piece in today's post.

I drew a lone Guardmouse. Because David's treatment options were all but exhausted, he opted to spend his remaining days at home, with his family. The Guardmouse has his sword sheathed. His body faces one direction, but he looks onward in the other––torn between past and future. Around him the crunch autumn leaves are coming off their branches, smaller twigs are breaking off and blowing past him in the cold winter wind that is inevitably coming. Yet, the Guardmouse stands and faces it.


The original inks were sent off to David, and I received a touching letter back from him in return as well as some examples of his drawings.
I started working on a color version from the scan I took before mailing off the original.
This step it like professional coloring-in-the-lines, and most of the color choices were based on the natural world, other than the mouse's fur (which I inherently kew should be a light tone) and the cloak, which I chose to compliment the orange autumn leaves.

I emailed the colored piece to David––but he had already passed away. His widow wrote back a very lovely response. I wish their family the best in their loss, and that includes David's art-brother Anthony too.
Rest in Peace, David Houry.
April 25, 2023
Recent Toned Commissions
I've finished all my recent toned paper commissions from Emerald City Comic Con:

Hellboy

TMNT's Slash












April 18, 2023
Fir Darrig

To the left you can see a mock cover for the first story I wrote for him (in which he steals a cloak of darkness, a sword of light, and a purse of plenty from three giants to help a young peasant marry above his station)
Below you can read the Prologue as well as a follow-up 8 pager of a common folktale where I used lots of Photo reference of Julia and my Sisters-in-Law for the three sisters.
Prologue:




Harp of Sorrow:









In the notes of that story, I also wrote that I wanted to do a tale with Black Annis, a blue faved witch who steals and eats children as well as a sidequest for Fir Darrig to obtain Iron Boots (which I think was both a homage to Mike Mignola's Helloy story 'Iron Shoes' as well as a way for Fir Darrig to walk along the bottom of a lake or the sea.)
I once pitched this as a comic after Mouse Guard's success, but there was worry about my time management and pausing Mouse Guard for an unknown. We also wondered about doing it as an anthology with different artists taking on each folktale I adapted for Fir Darrig--but again worry about the work involved (herding cats) with anthologies, not to mention the similarity to the Jim Henson's Storyteller comic Archaia was putting out.
Perhaps someday, I'll find a way I'm happy with to bring these tales and new ones as well to an audience.
April 11, 2023
Ornate Saintly Dragon

I worked on my piece live on my Twitch stream while viewers worked at home and then on Monday we shared our finished pieces.
Here is my finished colored Dragon. And below are my steps to create it as well as the community submissions.

This month the prompt was only two words: Ornate & Saintly. I opened a few tabs of google image searches of ornate patterns, saint icon art, and specifically a puppy being held up belly forward.

I started with a pencil drawing on copy paper of the form of the dragon with that puppy belly facing us and the little hind legs curled up--then I worked on a head shape. But for the most part, I only drew half of the dragon. Because I then scanned in and in Photoshop, was able to mirror the existing side to form the other. In this stage I also added in some stock ornate designs and patterns found in google search results to make a halo as well as a wing texture.
I then printed it out so I could do the tighter pencil drawing you see to the left on top of it on a light pad.
I knew the entire piece could become too busy with all the ornate patterning and jewels and halos, so I tried to keep the linework and texture as simple as I could. It was close, but I was able to finish my piece while I was still streaming.

I played with all sorts of color combinations keeping the idea of using red and gold (especially gold with the saint icon imagery). In the end, I liked having more of the warm saturated color in the halo and jewels and made the dragon more pale (which also emphasized some saintly age). I added a few color holds (areas where I want the ink lines to be a color other than black) to the halo design as well as to the flame and wing pattern.
For the final colors and all the highlights, shading, and texture I used the dodge and burn tools with a stock photoshop texture brush. Below you can again see the final rendered dragon.

But, as this is a community event, I wanted to share all the other entries posted in the Discord.













April 4, 2023
Coin Stickers Process

But over the years, I've seen more and more people making stickers, and had some requests for them––so it seemed past time to offer some.

The art on these stickers was inspired by the seal of Thomas Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Beauchamp,_11th_Earl_of_Warwick.
However, my mousified version was never intended for these stickers––it was going to be the 2023 Bookplate. After drawing it though, I wasn't convinced it would be right for that product and realized it would work perfectly for a 4" round sticker.

The circles were drawn in Photoshop where I combined all the paper drawings and added in the 'Hail Those Who Are Able The Guard Prevail' text.

In trying to make this look like a cross between an engraving and a relief print, I went with bold outlines, and stylized textures. It was while I was inking this I started thinking 'This could be a coin'...which stuck with me when starting to color it...

March 28, 2023
2023 Bookplate Process

Unfortunately I didn't take any photos as I worked, but I think I've cobbled together a few images that will still illustrate the process.

To start on the physical painting, I did a quick digital painting to get in the painter's mindset (form over line) on my iPad in Procreate.
This was to help me practice painting, but also just to come up with the composition of the piece itself that I could transfer on to canvas. And I could also look to this digital version to reference as I painted the traditional version to get value reference.

In some ways, this felt like I was moving backwards. I'd just worked up a digital painting to commit to lit forms and here I was reducing that into line again
As I mentioned above, I forgot to take photos during the process, so here's a photo of the traced printout, used graphite paper, and another blank canvas

I wouldn't recommend using something like chipboard as a palette. Since it's absorbant, the colors aren't as true as they will appear on the primed canvas. But the water content will also get sucked into the chipboard and dry everything out quicker than you might like, not to mention that fiber from the chipboard will lift and clog up the end of your brush.

I'm sad I didn't take process photos as I painted this piece. I'd have liked to show how I built up the layers. Once the piece was finished, I scanned it and did a little digital touch up by adding a little bit of highlight to the upper left and shadow to the lower right.
The bookplate is available in my online store: mouseguard.bigcartel.com
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