Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Colour Schemes

After the Jeffrey Brown copy and emulation I decided not to use acrylic or watercolour paints as I felt that I needed a lot more time in order to get to grips with painting and colour. As a result I already had the idea of producing a black and white comic, I didn't see this being a huge issue as many comic artists do publish their comics in black and white, especially independent artists. As well as this I wanted to keep the seriousness of the comic, despite there being the odd joke here and there, I wanted the audience to focus on the story rather than focusing on the drawing and colour more. Anyway, despite this I did experiment within Photoshop with colour as this shows experimentation and that I've tried other mediums.


This is a coloured version of the panel, the colours of the books need adjusting as I think these are too vibrant for the scene, especially the green book. Despite the colours of the books I do think that adding colour within Photoshop worked relatively considering this was the first attempt at colouring a panel within Photoshop.


This is the same panel except this uses a monochromatic colour scheme which focuses on a black and white effect. Overall this works well as the black and white effect allows the different elements within the panel to stand out, contrasting the different elements e.g. the piece of paper on the grey desk.

This is the third attempt at colour, again this uses a monochromatic colour scheme. This version uses a blue colour scheme this has been achieved by using different tones of blue throughout the highlight the different areas of the panel. This allows the elements to contrast one another due to the different tones used.

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