Luis' Illustrated Blog

Simpsons Storyboard artist. Artist and storyteller. Exploring how to make a living, by being creative.
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    • 04 Juggling overlapping art decisions
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    • 08 Adding tone to a thumbnail sketch
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    • 10 Tone, how to add it
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    • 12 Struggling: Finding the right poses.
    • 13 Coloring poses
    • 14 The teaser trailer
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    • 01 Story concept and rough outline
    • 02 Finding a style
    • 03 Designing Antagonists
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Monthly Archives: October 2010

Link to an interview with my current SIMPSONS director. Struggling to find clear, well drawn poses. Cool animated short.

October 28, 2010 in ART, THE SIMPSONS NEWS, VIDEOS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

First week of working on show 13. I was assigned act 1 and 4.

This show’s writer’s were freelancers. According to my director Mark Kirkland, the writer’s union requires the show to bring in at least one outside script every season.  Turns out, this script, is pretty darn good and very funny.

Speaking of Mark Kirkland, I was listening to the TOON IN! podcast last week and I heard an interview with him on the podcast.

http://www.tooninanimation.net/images/toon_in_logo.gif

I found it fascinating and I highly recommend you give it a listen.

To listen to it: CLICK HERE

http://tooninanimation.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/25-kirk-at-work-for-archives.jpg

ART

(For those of you coming in late to these posts, if you want to read what my project is about, CLICK HERE to learn about the general world the story takes place in, and CLICK HERE if you want to know the story itself.)

Alright, so it’s time to start adding poses for my “motion test”.  I’m limiting the poses to five total (including the last pose, which I’ve already finished and colored). If I think I need to add an anticipation pose (antic) or an overshoot (ovs) I’ll put them in later. For now I’ll just want to draw clear, well drawn “key” poses.

Easier said than done.

For the first time since I started writing my process, I didn’t want to post up my drawings.  I’m having sooo much trouble with these drawings.  I’m not happy with them at all. Still, it’s part of the process. I need to show them even when I think I’ve failed or when my skills aren’t up to par.

Generally, when I begin posing out a scene, I draw the gestures of all the poses I’m going to use.  I do this so I can check if my poses are going to work how I want them to, without having to go into the labor of making pretty drawings. This is what they looked like:

hot-dog-rough-02.jpg

Looking at hot dog….

hot-dog-rough-01.jpg

About to take a bite…

hot-dog-rough-11.jpg

and sees something...

hot-dog-rough-13.jpg

reaction shot from pull out (as will be seen further down below)…

Once I’m satisfied that I’ve got the poses that I want, I then begin to flesh out the drawings.

Okay, so I’m used to drawing bug eyed yellow people for a living. The style of the show is such, that I don’t really need to give them really naturalistic poses.  When I’m confronted with characters that DO need to give natural poses to, it suddenly becomes really difficult.  I can’t rely on the bad habits that I’ve picked up in my last 17 years.

So here’s me, trying really hard to make Rob look like he’s holding a hot dog very naturally:

hot-dog-rough-03.jpg

As I drew the drawing above, I realized I hadn’t really worked out Rob’s model as much as I thought I had.  Especially the hair from this point of view.  Also, I wasn’t too sure about the nose, mouth and chin relationships.  I drew the drawing below over the drawing above:

hot-dog-rough-04.jpg

I still didn’t like the drawing, though I thought it was getting better.  I took some time solve the hair problem and I drew the drawing below:

hot-dog-rough-05.jpg

Better hair shape but I STILL didn’t like the drawing.  It felt staged.  He just didn’t look natural. Who holds a hot dog and admires it like that? It looked a bit weird. I thought perhaps it was just a matter of turning the head and shoulders:

hot-dog-rough-06.jpg

But it was even worse when I did that.  I didn’t even bother drawing a nice version, I could tell it wasn’t going to work right away.

I went online and Googled people holding hot dogs. I must admit, in the back of my mind, there was this thought that perhaps I should change the hot dog to a hamburger or a pizza, because the idea of a pretty boy in a tight shirt admiring a hot dog seemed to hint at something I didn’t intend. In the end I convinced myself not to. Mostly, because I personally love eating hot dogs and I just wanted it to be a hot dog. I also looked at it as a challenge to myself.

One of the things I looked for, were photos where guys held hot dogs without it being an ad.

I found that the ones that looked most natural to me, were the ones where guys held something else in their other hand, like a drink. Another thing was that they didn’t really hold the hot dog up high, but kept it at chest level.  So I gave Rob a drink and lowered the hot dog:

hot-dog-rough-07.jpg

It was better.  So I cleaned it up a bit so I can see it better:

hot-dog-rough-08.jpg

…and RUINED IT, by giving him a crazed expression.  I’m going to need to go back  to the drawing above and figure out a better expression than the one I gave him.

I got frustrated and decided I should just keep going with the other poses and come back to the first pose later. Here’s pose two:

hot-dog-rough-09.jpg

As you can see from all my drawings here, I don’t have a light touch.  I scribble a lot until I find what I need. I explore until I can visualize where I want to go and then do another pass to clarify the scribbles:

hot-dog-rough-10.jpg

Once again, fail. I don’t think this reads the way I want. It’s too stiff. It needs to be redrawn in a different way.

I moved on to the next panel anyway:

hot-dog-rough-12.jpg

Not sure about this one either. I’ll need to see what I do with the panel before it, in order to decide whether or not I should keep it. I cheated drawing it because all I did was cut and move the face and arms around from the pose before, instead of redrawing the pose.

I kept going and drew the last pose:

hot-dog-rough-14.jpg

Not sure how it’s working so far.  It seems off. Especially because of the slanted background.  I may need to slant Rob a bit.  Also, I think I need to move the camera down so Rob’s feet aren’t on the edge of the frame.

Overall, I’m just frustrated with the work.  I need to work through it though.  I know at some point, I’ll hit something I think is working and I’ll come out learning something.

VIDEO

This is an amazing animated short.  Very inspiring. It’s a very interesting marriage of Japanese and western animation influences:

FAMILY

Big things are happening here with our family.  At least big when it comes to milestones for two of our kids.

The first one is that Dante (2 1/2 years old) went pee pee in the pottie for the first time.  This is big for us since it means less diapers to buy when he finally get pottie trained.  He’s been doing good so far and we’re very proud of him.

The second is that baby Ambrose can now scoot himself around the house.  We love it. He looks so funny doing it and he’s that much closer to being able to crawl.  The best part about it is that now we can set him on the carpet and relax while he entertains himself playing with toys and chasing after his big brother and sister.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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Color style test. My review of THE SECRET OF KELLS.

October 21, 2010 in ART, MOVIES, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Not much to write about THIS week.  I managed to finish up Act 1 of show 12 last Friday and this week I’ve been working on Act 3.

The big news for me was that my old board revisions partner has decided to go freelance and is no longer doing  board revisions.  This meant that another person took his place. A SIMPSONS veteran from a while back.  Last week was his first week and he’s playing catch up on how everything works the same way I did when I first started.  Wish him the best.

ART

(For those of you coming in late to these posts, if you want to read what my project is about, CLICK HERE to learn about the general world the story takes place in, and CLICK HERE if you want to know the story itself.)

I’ve been really trying to get the coloring of the drawing done.  It’s pretty much there. I’ll need to add and clean up a few things but this is pretty much the way it will look:

hot-dog-color-01-copy.jpg

Once I do the slight adjustments, I’m going to begin experimenting on the movement.  I painted it all using Storyboard Pro.  I’m not sure how much all the line work is going to slow down the program. I hope it’s not much, otherwise, this was all for nothing, or at the very least, will take me longer to do if I need to use another program.  I hope I can do what I need to do.

What I did above was, take my old value study:

hotdog-final.jpg

and used it as a guide for my colors.  It helped a TON and I’m going to do it again with just about everything I do with color from now on.  It took a lot of the guess work out of what I needed to do next and how I need to approach coloring it.

MOVIES

A lot has been said about how 2D, hand drawn animation, is dead. It is now obvious to me that the people who say that, haven’t watched THE SECRET OF KELLS.

http://images3.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20100116104450/irishcomics/images/thumb/4/43/Moore_Brendan_Secret_Kells.jpg/300px-Moore_Brendan_Secret_Kells.jpg

THE SECRET OF KELLS is a movie the glorifies and thrives on it’s hand drawn, nature. Taking it’s art direction from illuminated manuscripts from the middle ages (specifically, The Book of Kells) THE SECRET OF KELLS bombards you with moving art like no movie has ever done.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_bfgUrSxfcAk/SwQr0zCGiEI/AAAAAAAAAIc/SvLNuaeA2eA/s1600/tsok.jpg

I watched the movie awestruck at how beautiful it all was.  I couldn’t believe it.  I would have wept if it wasn’t for the fact that the story kept me my attention well enough so that it stopped me from doing so.

That brings me to the other thing that blew me away.  The story wasn’t based on a fairytale (though it has a fairy in it) and wasn’t a musical.  It wasn’t what most western animated mainstream movies tend to be about. Heck, it wasn’t even what most Anime tend to be about.  This movie was about the very odd subject of monks writing an illuminated manuscript of the four Gospels historically called, The Book of Kells.  It’s also the story about an abbot who’s lost touch with what’s truly important, while he tries desperately to defend his community from the coming of the viking marauders. The main character of the story is a boy who’s caught in between the love and obedience he has for his uncle the abbot and his love for illuminating manuscripts.

I loved it.  Especially since I love the middle ages.  It’s the only non Catholic animated movie I’ve ever seen that treats religious life as a normal way of life and makes no judgments upon it.

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_JaiZhsz4uks/S6F6j-95QcI/AAAAAAAADts/n2srm3-T108/s400/secret-of-kells.jpg

I can’t say enough good things about this movie. If you haven’t watched this movie, you owe it to yourself to do so.

THE SECRET OF KELLS proves that 2D hand drawn animation isn’t dead.  Why? Well, even though CG can do many wonderful things, there is no way that a CG film could capture the 2 dimensional artistry that THE SECRET OF KELLS has produced.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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My experience working on the Banksy Couch Gag. Just a little bit of coloring.

October 14, 2010 in ART, Banksy, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Wow. As of the time of this writing the Couch Gag written by artist Banksy, has just aired. It seemed to have made quite a stir.  I thought I’d write about my experience working on that Couch Gag.

the_simpsons_banksy_slice_01

In July, I was put to work on show 6. The show was directed by veteran Director Bob Anderson (at the time, I cryptically  wrote a little bit about it HERE and HERE under THE SIMPSONS NEWS. When I refer to the “guest writer” I’m talking about Banksy). Show 6 had gone through the Story Reel stage, which basically means that the writers and producers had seen a rough story reel version of the show and had made changes to the script. My job as a storyboard revisionist is to take those notes and make the changes necessary to the current storyboard to reflect said notes.  This is what I expected to do when I went into Bob’s office that Monday.  Instead, he told me he wasn’t giving me an Act to fix but rather, he was going to put me on the Couch Gag.

I raised my eye brows,

“Oh, okay.”

He smiled and gestured to a chair,

“Here, have a seat. You get to do something special.” I sat. “Do you know who Banksy is?”

“No.”

“Oh.” He blinked, “He’s this famous artist tagger guy. They made a documentary about him.” Bob proceeded to enlighten me on what he knew about Banksy and what he thought.  I listened,

“Yeah I’ve heard there was a special Couch Gag they had gotten from a special artist.”

“Oh yeah? Who told you?”

“I don’t remember actually. Just came up in conversation.”

“Well,  this is it. You get to storyboard it.”

“Okay”.

He took out sketches papers and notes, “These are yours. I’ve already made the notes so I’m going to go through them with you. These are the notes from Al, and this is the ‘script’. Which really isn’t a script but you’ll see.”

He handed me a bunch of papers and explained what they were.  One group of papers where Banksy‘s “storyboards”. Which were actually drawings drawn on letter paper with little squares on the left with a drawing and a description on the right describing what the drawing on the left meant.  This was “the script”. The other group of sheets were the same little squares but put into storyboard format. Only, they really weren’t working since the drawings where more story sketches than storyboards.  Bob explained that it was my job to take Banksy‘s story sketches and make a functioning storyboard out of them. He had drawn in red Sharpy all over the rough “board” indicating what he thought the camera ought to be doing and making adjustments to the drawings.  He explained to me what he wanted done, what shots where the same shots, where the cuts were, what details needed to be on them,…etc.  He recomposed shots and gave me suggestions on what I needed to do to make some shots work.

He then showed me the “character designs” of the “Koreans” Banksy wanted. There was a note, from the producers, on one of the sheets that read, “Make sure Korean animators are not ethnically offensive. No Buck teeth, etc.” Ironically they all looked Chinese (straw hats and all).

During this meeting I turned to Bob confused,

“Okay, so this is a commentary about how messed up we treat Koreans but he makes them all look Chinese? How does that make sense? Is that part of the joke?”

“I don’t know, but that’s what they want.” Keep in mind that Bob is married to a Korean woman and he seemed a bit annoyed. Ironically, there was a description of a Mexican worker stuffing the Bart dolls; which I later drew as a Sombrero waring, big mustache toting, poncho using guy (I’m Hispanic and I though it was funny). The note from Fox was that it was too racist and they had me change him into a Korean. It made no sense to me because I drew a Mexican stereotype to represent a Mexican, but Banksy had drawn a Chinese stereotype to represent a Korean.

In the final version, the one that aired, all the Koreans looked Korean. I guess they had enough time to think about it and change their minds.

And then there was this conversation:

“So is the decapitated dolphin head dispensing tape, or is  it licking the boxes shut like an envelope?”

“I think it should just  come across the top of the box as if it had tape on it.”

“Does the tongue have tape?”

“Not sure yet. You can try making it lick the box as if it was an envelope and we’ll see what they say.”

“Okay.”

In the end, they didn’t like it.  They had me change it.

And then this conversation happened:

“Yeah this scene where the kid’s arms melts in the toxic waste tank is out. It slows things down.” Bob stares a the sketch, “Why is he dipping cells in the toxic waste anyway? Is it bonding the paint to the cells?”

“I don’t think it matters, does it?”

After the two hours it took to explain what need to be done, I took the work to my office and stared blankly at my computer screen.

“Wow, this going to be a lot of work.” I rolled up my sleeves, read all the notes again. Looked at Banksy‘s story sketches and began trying to make it all make sense.

For two weeks I worked on the Couch Gag. I had to find ways to keep the spirit of Banksy‘s sketches while reinventing the shots.  I looked at INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM for some inspiration.  I added shadows and atmosphere to the boards in order to try to “sell” the final look of the thing. At one point, I had to reapply the shadows because the grays I had originally used where too dark to be reproduced in the copy machine.  This set me back a bit.

Sometime during the process, my old office mate came in and asked me what I was doing.  I told him and showed him the boards and sketches.  He stared at them and stared at me and was just wide eyed,

“Are you serious?! They’re doing this?! No way,” staring at the sheets, “These are HIS drawings?”

“Yeah, and check these out,” I handed him Banksy’s designs of the Koreans,

“Wow, this is so messed up. Wow. Crazy. Can’t believe they’re doing this.”

I had fun drawing the panda getting beaten, and the unicorn I drew was pretty much used verbatim when they did its final design. Bob’s comment when he saw my unicorn was,

“That’s one sad looking unicorn.”

We sent the board to the head director of the studio who had notes I had to integrate. I was also pressured to hurry up so they could get the board sent to Banksy and Al Jean for their notes, which I also had to revise the board for.  There were last minute notes and late nights just trying to get it done.  I ended up doing two version of the final board. One for Fox and the other for the studio.  The Fox one had less drawings in it so that the producers didn’t think the final version was going to be too slow.  The longer version was so that it could be more easily shot and turned into a story reel, since it had more poses per panel.

At one point, I started this conversation with Bob,

“Man, they’re really making a big deal out of this Couch Gag.  I mean, It’s just a Couch Gag right?”

“It’s important to them.”

“Yeah but, it’s not like anyone is going to pay attention to it. How will they know it was Banksy that wrote it. I mean people are just gonna look at it and think, ‘That was a weird Couch Gag,’ forget about it and just keep watching the show.”

Boy was I wrong.

There was a LOT of pressure on me those two weeks because I new the producers would be scrutinizing what I did.  When it was finally done, I was relieved and proud.

A week or so later, someone coming near my office, asked me if I’d done the Banksy boards. I said I had.  She then turned to the  coworker behind her and told her  I had done the boards. It seems the person that asked, was asking in the other person behalf.  That coworker nodded and walked away without looking at me. At first I thought that coworker had wanted to know because they were cool. I took it as a  compliment, but then I realized, she was Korean, and I had probably insulted her because I had drawn the Koreans looking Chinese.

I wish I could put up my boards and Banksy‘s drawings here on my site but I’m afraid of getting in trouble so I’ll play it safe.  I’ll just link to the Couch Gag:

ART

(For those of you coming in late to these posts, if you want to read what my project is about, CLICK HERE to learn about the general world the story takes place in, and CLICK HERE if you want to know the story itself.)

Started to “model out” the drawings this week.  I only got to work on the drawing on Sunday so I didn’t get much done. I only got two out the three Sorcerers started.  I still have  a bit more to do on them but it’s a start:

hot-dog-1st-color-pass.jpg

I think this is actually what I want. I like the way it look and I’m enjoying myself.  I’ll see how much time it takes. If it isn’t too bad, I’ll color the whole cartoon this way.  It’s not like I’m going to animate it so I can get away with a more rendered out look.

I’m using my tonal study as a guide and I’m very glad I have it. It’s taking away the guess work so I can concentrate on  getting the look and the brushes right.  Hopefully next week I’ll have more to write and show.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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Dante comes to work with me. Another epic couch gag. Style tests and trying to understand color.

October 7, 2010 in ART, THE SIMPSONS NEWS

THE SIMPSONS NEWS

Monday we managed to finish revising show 11 and I was asked to board show 10’s Couch Gag.  Once again, I’ve got a another crazy epic Couch Gag to do. It might as well be it’s own short film, it’s so long. This season is full of very long Couch Gags. Not sure why.

Tuesday I brought Dante to work with me. Our daycare was closed that day. Alesha took Elizabeth to work with her and baby Ambrose was taken care of by my brother-in-law.

Dante was a good boy overall. I had originally planed on dropping Dante off with my wife at noon, mostly because I thought he might be a handful. He behaved so well that I kept him and actually got work done too. I was very proud of him.

ART

(For those of you coming in late to these posts, if you want to read what my project is about, CLICK HERE to learn about the general world the story takes place in, and CLICK HERE if you want to know the story itself.)

Now that I have the drawing up on the computer, vectorized and inked, I started trying out style tests.

My first test was an attempt at a thick outline around the art.  I only got as far as the Sorcerers before I made up my mind that it was too much work and it didn’t look the way I wanted it too:

hot-dog-dark-outline.jpg

My next test was to add a black shadow to the drawing.  To be honest, I think I did a lousy job inking the drawing.  I put all the blacks in all the wrong spots. I should have blacked out the background instead of the characters.  Still. As lousy as it turned out, I found it very difficult to get the same effects I usually get with an actual brush.  I didn’t like the process much, so I decided I didn’t want to go in that direction anyway:

hot-dog-with-blacks.jpg

The test after that, was just to keep the lines I had and color the drawing.

At first, I was thinking I would use a self ink line, but then I didn’t want to re-ink the drawing all over again. I also realized that it would have been far more work than I really wanted to do.

I have very little experience with color and I had no idea where to begin.  I started coloring the drawing like I would have normally done it, namely, color everything the color it is.  The more I though about that though, the more I thought I needed to really think more holistic about it.  I thought, instead of using all the colors I could, I should limit my pallet and think about how the drawing should feel rather than the what color the sky is normally and what color apes are normally.

I decided to make the dominant color green.  Green was going to be the color of the Sorcerers. Why? Well it worked on Disney’s SLEEPING BEAUTY.

http://www.futuregamez.net/movies/sleepingb/sleepingb1.jpg

I thought green would work for a “strange magick” feel.

I’m planning to make red  Rob’s “I’m angry. It’s time for payback” color and blues and yellow where going to be the calm normal colors.  Since this particular drawing was dominated by the Sorcerers, I thought it should be green.

I started laying down the colors but I’m not done yet.  This is what I have so far:

hot-dog-green.jpg

What do you think?

By the way, all this work was done  using Storyboard Pro.

For more comic and stories written by me, CLICK HERE.

If you like what you read, please consider signing up to my rss feed.

Comments are appreciated as well.

I also have a store. Click Here and check it out.

If you would like to have a text ad on my site, click on the red BUY LINKS button under the Archives list.

And while you’re at it, please Digg me too.

 

Writing this blog is almost a part time job for me. Tips are most welcome.


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Hi, Welcome!

This blog is your window into the daily life of a Simpsons artist. See what it's like work on a hit TV show!

I update this blog once a week, on Thursdays and (sometimes) Fridays. If you don't see anything new, just check back on one of those days.

My e-mail is: luis(at)luisescobarblog(dot)com

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