MATURE CONTENT

(sshh!) little froggies!
~~~
Personal blog of Amanda Lafrenais,
artist of Love Me Nice.



reglorgable

reglorgable

Thursday, January 3, 2013 | 99 notes [art process] [art advice]

The settings for my inking brush in Sai, because people have been asking.

The settings for my inking brush in Sai, because people have been asking.

Tuesday, December 18, 2012 | 87 notes [art process] [painttool sai] [sai brush] [brush settings]

So Dave Shabet took screenshots of his most recent page while he worked on it and … oh goodness, look at this thing. That’s a screenshot an hour at some points. I am constantly impressed by his pages. Dang, son.

Sunday, April 1, 2012 | 100 notes [dead winter] [dave shabet] [webcomics] [art process]

shupie asked:
Hi! I just want to say I really really really love your art! I was able to buy some of your minicomics at MoCCA two years ago or so and gosh, they came out real great! I have a question, I'm not sure if you've answered this before (sorry if you have) but how do you do your screentones? They're really awesome!

I’ll do a tutorial/guide eventually, but basically my tones are always unique and generated on the spot. Basically, making sure I’m working in Grayscale (or the next few steps will go wonky) in photoshop I tone/shade with flat grays on multiple layers and then add textures where I see fit, and then on each layer(or selected area, depending) I apply the Color Halftone filter, alternating between the angles of the “default” setting, or setting all angles to 45 degrees — these are my go-to angles and any others tend to throw things off. I just play around and change “size” and angle depending on preferences, and sometimes I’ll repeatedly “undo” a halftone filter because it didn’t look right, and keep trying different settings over and over until the tones look how I wanted them to. I’ve sometimes made textures by applying a grain or texture to flat grays, then going into brightness and contrast and upping contrast all the way up, and then tweaking brightness until I see just the right mix/concentration of dots/texture. This results in there being no obvious grays in my textures/tones.

Friday, March 9, 2012 | 4 notes [art process] [questions]

lovemenice:

I started this AGES ago and gave up on it because I get really uncomfortable when drawing at the computer, or at least I used to.

This is in response to numerous questions about how I draw my characters, so I thought I’d break it down. I draw them slightly different from this more recently, but this is still how they’re put together.

Praline’s eyes will always make me laugh.

Reblogging this here because it may be ~*~*useful*~*~ to people who don’t give a crap about my comic.

Sunday, December 4, 2011 | 80 notes [art process] [art advice] [my artwork] [love me nice] [sfw]

Why Amanda Draws Eyes the Way She Does and Stuff
Note: This is better viewed at full size!
People have asked many times about how or why I draw stuff the way I do, and the reason it’s taken me so long to put “guides” together is, well… I don’t know why I make the choices I do sometimes! I think a lot of artists take for granted things that integrate into their style.
So I sat down and thought about the way I draw eyes and actually made some sense of some of the decisions I make. This isn’t a how-to-draw guide, and instead it illustrates how I think about eyes. Though it might still be useful

Why Amanda Draws Eyes the Way She Does and Stuff

Note: This is better viewed at full size!

People have asked many times about how or why I draw stuff the way I do, and the reason it’s taken me so long to put “guides” together is, well… I don’t know why I make the choices I do sometimes! I think a lot of artists take for granted things that integrate into their style.

So I sat down and thought about the way I draw eyes and actually made some sense of some of the decisions I make. This isn’t a how-to-draw guide, and instead it illustrates how I think about eyes. Though it might still be useful

Thursday, December 1, 2011 | 142 notes [my artwork] [art process] [eyes] [eyelashes]

justripley asked:
I was watching you livestream and your brush pen handling is really impressive. Do you have any advice for using a brush pen?

Hope this is helpful :O I was a teachers assistant and a volunteer instructor at different points, but I’m a hands-on kinda teacher so I hope all these words make sense:

  • Make committed lines — don’t just follow your pencil lines. You should know what kind of line you want to put down before you put your brush to paper.
  • Manipulate your lines. Brushes are lovely and fluid, but you have to learn how to manipulate them to do what you want. Hold them straight vertically to get thin lines, lay the brush on its side to get the fattest lines. You are in complete control of the brush, and you can make it do whatever you want.
  • Always have your eyes looking ahead of the line you’re inking to where you want it to go. Guide your hand with your eyes, you don’t need to watch your own hand — that will make you shortsighted and unable to anticipate curves or areas where you need to change the line widths/speed.
  • Do not rely on your wrist’s dexterity. Small movements in your fingers and wrists are needed for details and smaller lines, but the longer/thicker and/or more “sweeping” your lines, the more you need to learn to use your entire drawing arm to move to control the line. A painter paints with their whole body — inking with any kind of brush puts you somewhere between a penciller and a painter. Also, leave plenty of room for your drawing arm to move freely and comfortably.
  • With that in mind, slanted drawing surfaces become that much more important in allowing your drawing/illustration to be treated like a canvas and allow your hand/arm/chest mobility.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011 | 26 notes [questions] [art advice] [art process]

cherryvision-deactivated2012011 asked:
Can you show an example of your drawing process? Like the sketching out a character and then details. I'm always really curious about it because I'm trying to teach myself to draw and I love your style. Also any tips would be greatly appreciated.

Next time I sit down and draw a comic, I’ll get detailed scans along the way. I got some crappy phone cam pics for an admittedly sloppy page, so until then here’s me copy and pasting that:

Since people have expressed interest and asked questions before, I figured I’d take photos/screenshots of a panel of page 97 as I worked on it. For funsies. Sorry for the phone quality!


First, really quick rough pencils.
Panel’s been quartered off for, I dunno, balance. Made sense at the time. I tend to draw lines connecting characters’ eyes because it really bugs me when eyes don’t meet.


Then, I erase everything til you can barely see the sketches.


Basic shapes.


Rough details.


Camera wouldn’t focus, the marker was too light.
Anyway, then I go over the pencil details I like with a copic marker ( bg10) and erase the rest. Any pencil lines under the copic marker become permanent, it is also what I draw panel borders with. Stole that idea from Kel McDonald.


Then I draw over that the final pencil details.


Then, inks. (they scanned kinda dark, bleh)


(click for big version)
And then, initial editing. More edits were done after this (as you can see on the resective page).

Same stuff with a different panel, except I went straight from rough sketch to marker to details:

There’s more to it than that but if y’all liked this I’ll cover the line editing and tones :U unless that bores ya

Thursday, August 25, 2011 | 21 notes [my artwork] [art advice] [art process] [love me nice] [kelly] [mac]

People expressed interest in my “processes,” so since I am working on Slipshine as we speak I decided to snap photos of a panel as I worked on it. Sadly they’re from my phone, but you get the idea.

Really like this panel. There still need to be adjustments, like the chubby one’s jaw ends a little shorter, and her chin could stand some lowering and rounding to make her head longer. But all in all I’m pleased! Its hard to draw kisses!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011 | 3 notes [slipshine] [my artwork] [titty time] [art process]