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Blender 3D By Example.

You're reading from   Blender 3D By Example. A project-based guide to learning the latest Blender 3D, EEVEE rendering engine, and Grease Pencil

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789612561
Length 658 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Oscar Baechler Oscar Baechler
Author Profile Icon Oscar Baechler
Oscar Baechler
Xury Greer Xury Greer
Author Profile Icon Xury Greer
Xury Greer
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to 3D and the Blender User Interface 2. Editing a Viking Scene with a Basic 3D Workflow FREE CHAPTER 3. Modeling a Time Machine - Part 1 4. Modeling a Time Machine - Part 2 5. Modern Kitchen - Part 1: Kitbashing 6. Modern Kitchen - Part 2: Materials and Textures 7. Modern Kitchen - Part 3: Lighting and Rendering 8. Illustrating an Alien Hero with Grease Pencil 9. Animating an Exquisite Corpse in Grease Pencil 10. Animating a Stylish Short with Grease Pencil 11. Creating a Baby Dragon - Part 1: Sculpting 12. Creating a Baby Dragon - Part 2: Retopology 13. Creating a Baby Dragon - Part 3: UV Unwrapping 14. Creating a Baby Dragon - Part 4: Baking and Painting Textures 15. Creating a Baby Dragon - Part 5: Rigging and Animation 16. The Wide World of Blender 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Inking the alien hero

A clean-inked hero illustration is a work of art in its own right. The high-contrast black and white of ink makes it ideal for comics and print for its strong impact, and in 2D animation, clean ink is a vital ingredient for coloring and separation. Ink lines can taper thin to thick like an old-fashioned quill, or use strict line weights such as pigment liners. Good ink uses placement and weight to create a drawing hierarchy, conveying shadows and crevices, and contours and sections. Through hatching and patterns, it can fully render the light and shadow of a scene all by itself.

First, we will ink the major lines of our alien, paying extra attention to sections that separate major colors, such as the head versus clothing. Then, we'll add smaller lines to aid the eye regarding details of light and form.

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