Posts Tagged ‘commission’

Loligoth Bride

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Goth Bride by Amy Crook

Goth Bride by Amy Crook

The delightful Ang of Lowbrow Events commissioned this girl through my Be a Cartoon service over at Not Dead Yet Studios. She does alternative weddings, so she gave me free reign to doodle up any bride I wanted, as long as she was a little off the rails.

From her stripey stockings to her tiny top hat, this bride has a definite Gothic Lolita theme. I added a few spiders for extra morbidity, and then spun their web in the lining of her layered skirt. I considered doing the roses the same blood red as her hair and heart-shaped lipstick, but I decided to go with an eerie purple to match her pale violet eyes instead.

I’m happy to say Ang was thrilled, and you can find my bride lurking on the contact page of her site.

Loligoth Bride, 5″x7″ pen and ink and copic marker on watercolor paper, commission.

Categories: Completed Commissions, Daily Art, People, Figures and Faces, Whimsical and Strange, Zombies, Skulls, and Other Morbid Things
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Meet Carol’s Monster, Bernie

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Carol's Monster Bernie by Amy Crook

Carol’s Monster Bernie by Amy Crook

I’d like you all to meet Bernie. He’s a little shy about his name, but we all know that even a Bernie can have a brave heart. He’s Carol’s bodyguard, and he helps keep things from hurting her. His helmet’s a little crooked, and his axe needs a bit of a sharpening, but he’s got a heart of gold — you can see it right there on his armor!

Bernie is Carol’s Monster, the first completed one from my Draw Your Monster sale a few weeks ago. As part of my Big Art Sale (to help me get to my 72-year-old Mom’s suddenly-moved-up wedding in 3 weeks), I’m offering them again, so if you missed out and wanted one, now’s the time.

As a note, since Bernie’s a commission, he’s not actually available for redistribution under the CC license mentioned below — all his rights and permissions belong to Carol now.

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Completed Commissions, Daily Art
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Cartoon: Skaja Wills

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Skaja Wills, final, by Amy Crook

Skaja Wills, final, by Amy Crook

Ever wondered what it’s like to become a cartoon? Skaja Wills was kind enough to let me share the process with you.

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Categories: Completed Commissions, Daily Art, People, Figures and Faces
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Commission: Mermaid

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Mermaid by Amy Crook

Mermaid by Amy Crook

In the fall of 2008, my friend Jeff commissioned me to paint a gift for his wife, for a combination 5th anniversary and Christmas present. It was an interesting challenge keeping it a secret for two months, but the moment of presentation was a smashing success!

We wanted to take into account as many of her favorite things as possible, so not only does it have the mermaid as a central theme, we added in the sunken pirate ship, and of course a shark or two.

24″x30″, oil on canvas, not for sale (commission)

Click through to see the process, which was thoroughly documented to keep Jeff current on my progress. (more…)

Categories: Angels, Cthulhu, and Other Myths, Completed Commissions, Daily Art, Sea Creatures and Other Animals
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Nugget

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Nugget by Amy Crook

Nugget by Amy Crook

I got to paint squid! His name is Nugget.

My friend Gretchen commissioned me to paint her a giant squid to go over her mantle. We agreed on a size and general design, and after many months of slowness on my part acquiring the iridescent paint (He is about 95% iridescent or pearlescent. Shiny!), working and reworking his background, and finally getting him painted in and then made to not look bad, I have… SQUID! I will say that none of the photos really capture the color well, and nothing can really make you see the shiny that it is in person. It’s subtle, but awesome.

24″x36″, oil on canvas, not for sale (commission)

For the curious, here’s a bit of his process. Note how the bottom edge of the easel matches the bottom of the painting — you can see I’m a very careful, precise sort of artist. 😉
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Categories: Completed Commissions, Daily Art, Sea Creatures and Other Animals, Tentacles
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Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin by Amy Crook

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin
by Amy Crook

First you can see just the painting itself, cold winter sky stretched above and the snow melting into the dark, frozen earth, and the hydrangeas bravely blooming on anyway.

I am a terrible art photographer, so please excuse the uneven colours and strange shadows and glare. This project took ages (finding a box to ship it in was an unexpected challenge!) but I feel like the time spent was worth it, given the end result.

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin, triptych; oil on 10″x20″ canvas; digital photos thereof, InDesign layout & color laser prints on parchment paper in wood frames.
Sources: “The Children’s Hour” by Longfellow, and the Cezanne font

Read How it Happened…

I wasn’t sure how it would all work out when Natalie came to me wanting a painting. We talked for a long while on gmail, bandying ideas back and forth, drawing out the images she was really interested in, and over the course of days the idea of the triptych was born. The canvas itself is smallish, 10x20in, and I really enjoyed working in the odd dimensions with what felt like infinite sky stretching up above the tower slowly crumbling away on the cold winter ground.

There was a story to Natalie’s choices, but it’s not really mine to tell. Suffice it to say she is happy with the results, and hopes to have it hung in her new home soon.

Since my own walls are yellow, rather than white, I took a photo on a sheet to give one an idea of how it looks all assembled.

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin

You can see that I found “float” frames in a dimension that’s similar to the canvas, tall and thin, and we split up the poem’s stanzas into two groups. On page 1 we have a photograph of the little stray hydrangea bush that was blooming valiantly outside the tower’s shelter, huddled up to our leading B. On page 2 I used a photo of the tower from the middle of the painting process, before the bushes were painted in, to allow the T to grow up out of it unencumbered.

The Children's Hour 1

The Children's Hour 2

And now, a bit of the process! I’m doing it backwards this time so that those who just want to see the final don’t have to scroll. 😉

The very first step was to create that cold winter sky and the hard, dark ground below. I actually was really tempted just to keep the canvas once it was done, there was something really appealing for me about the juxtaposition of colour and shade here, but I was good and kept going.

Step 1

Then, once the background was nice and dry, I put in the sun and the trees, and blocked in the shape and shade of the tower.

Step 2

Next the tower got shade and details put in, the shape of the bricks coming out. This is the stage that I photographed for the illuminated letter T.

Step 3

Leaves! There were bushy plants painted in, just waiting for their blossoms.

Step 4

I’ve skipped a few stages in here, but the blossoms went in and, some snow was added to the ground as well as shadows and some extra dimensionality for the scattered bricks on the ground. At this point I hung it in the living room to dry so I could look at it in low light, and the only real difference from this to the final is some extra highlighting and shading, and another layer of soft glow around the sun.

Step 5

And of course, there’s the finished product:

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin by Amy Crook

Till the Walls Shall Crumble to Ruin
by Amy Crook

“It just turned out so perfect. I have no idea how she figured out exactly what I wanted before I even knew it, but this is it.

The first thing that grabbed me the first time she showed me a picture was the sun, all pale and wan up in the corner, and I still love it just as much in person. And the tree on the side! I love it so much.

And the poem turned out really well. I admit to being worried when we first started talking about doing it this way, but it worked out beautifully. The font, the floating, the paper… it came together very well.

It looks so great hanging on my wall.”

Natalie

Categories: Completed Commissions, Daily Art
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