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Mother’s day is just around the corner, and you are still looking for that perfect gift!
Consider a hand drawn pencil portrait of your loved ones. Flowers will be thrown out in a matter of weeks, get your mother that perfect gift! For less than the price of bouquet of flowers, you can commission a custom pencil portrait that will last a lifetime. All you need is your favorite photograph, and I will have your drawing complete within 3 days, and ready to ship.
Pencil Sketches make great personalised Mothers Day gifts and are a unique way to say thank you to a very special person in your life. It can be portrait of you, your family, or anything else you think she might love.
If you would like to commission a portrait, please visit my site
where you will find samples and my contact information. You can also fill out the contact form or just email the photograph and size you’d like and I’ll get back to you with all the details. Please allow 3-5 days shipping for ground orders.
Shane Burke
www.beezink.com
Here is a quick tutorial on how to draw a realistic eye.
Any pencil will work. Make sure to have a high quality photo to reference. To blow up the sample image below for a closer look, control click it to open it up in a new page. From the new page a magnifying glass should appear when you mouse over the image. Click again to zoom in.
1. Start with a basic football shape. The shape is very important.
2. Add the outlines of the eyelid, pupil, and iris, leaving an empty spot for the reflection. Sketch out the eyebrow shape.
3. Fill in the eyebrow with small strokes. Add the eye lashes with small quick pencil strokes, heavier on the top eyelid. Curve them just a bit toward the outside of the eye. The bottom lid should have fewer lashes, and they should be softer.
4. Fill in the iris leaving the empty spots for the reflection. With a shading tool, (paper stomp/q-tip or similar) begin shading in the eye lids. Add detail to the pupil leaving it lighter where the iris and pupil meet.
5. Use the same blending tool to shade in the pupil and the area between the eyebrow and eye lids. Leave the pupils light for now. Blend the eyebrow a little smoother with your shading tool.
6. Darken up the eye lashes and add a little more shading to the outside of the eye up towards the eyebrow. Darken the top of the pupil making sure you do not smudge the white spot in the iris or pupil. Darken the inside corner of the eye. Add a little shading to the edges of the whites of the eyes.
7. Fill in the rest of the pupil, leaving it lighter at the bottom.
8. Blend under the eyebrow some more, making it smooth. Add a little detail to the eyebrow, and sharpen/blur edges as needed. Touch up any areas that may need it.
This is a real quick tutorial. Let me know if you have any questions or if there is anything I can help you with. I hope you enjoyed it and it helped with your sketches. I would love to see how your drawings come out. Please feel free to post your work!
Shane Burke, BeezInk.com
WHY DO I NEED A VECTOR FILE?
If you ever want to print your logo or any other marketing materials, you are going to need vector art. Vector images will save you time and money down the road, and most printers require it. So what is a vector image and why is it so important?
Vector files are normally AI, EPS, or SVG, file types. They can be re-sized as large or small as you want with out loosing any quality in the image, which makes them great for print. You can easily update colors, move elements, and edit fonts with just a few mouse clicks. This is because the image is based on paths and mathematical information, not pixels. Raster images are pixel based and loose image quality when re-sized. See the example.
AI files are Adobe Illustrator file. This format is used to represent vector based images in either PDF or EPS. Aside from Illustrator there area few other design programs that read this file type. Corel Draw, Freehand, Ghostscape, Drawplus and Inkscape are a few. AI vector files can be converted to just about any file type you will ever need.
EPS Encapsulated PostScript is a standard graphic file format for grouping text, images and other graphic elements into layouts. EPS-files are a bit like PDF files. They can be viewed and inserted in other documents but they are not normally meant to be edited. The EPS format is one of the most versatile file formats used by designers and printers all over the world and required by many professionals for quality printing and imaging. EPS files are made up of two main parts; the high resolution data and the preview. Ask your designer for EPS files when the project is complete. You will need them.
JPGs Joint Photographic Experts Group files are (or were) the standard digital image format, typically shot with a digital camera or basic flat pixel images. These types are great for photography and still imagery, especially archived image libraries or for transmitting across networks because of their small file size. They are great for photographers, web, and email. JPG’s or any raster file types are not great for print or resizing.
PNG Portable Network Graphics. The PNG file is a newer file format which has over taken the basic JPEG and GIF file formats. The PNG format uses a loss-less compression approach and supports 24-bit colors or 8-bit colors. The PNG format is also popular for being able to control transparency information, Adobe gamma corrections, and file defined background color. This file format compresses without losing image quality, but files are significantly larger than other image formats. PNG files are great for web design and user interface graphics, but they are still raster images and lousy for print and resizing.
Many debate what the best file format for print is. Beezink will provide every file type you will need. When you commission design work from Beezink, you will receive a JPG file to review your work, a PNG for web and user interface projects, and AI, or EPS files for your print needs. If there are any specific files types that are needed let your designer know.
Shane Burke, www.beezink.com
Every reliable source on the best portrait artists in the history of European art includes the 17th Century Dutch painter, Rembrandt; Flemish painter of the 17th Century, Frans Hals; and 19th Century French Realist painter, Gustave Courbet. Each was an outstanding artist and innovator during his lifetime as well as a powerful and lasting influence on art and world cultures to follow.
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (1606 – 1669) was born in Leiden, the Netherlands. Although his father was a miller of modest means, he encouraged his son to pursue his amazing talents in art. Rembrandt entered the University of Leiden at the age of 14, but left soon after to study art in Amsterdam. As an adult, his personal life took a tragic turn, and all four of his children, his first wife, and later on, his second wife died during his lifetime. Despite his misfortunes, Rembrandt was a prolific master artist. He produced an extensive body of 2,300 works, including many celebrated paintings, drawings and etchings. Among his most famous portrait paintings are his: (1) Self Portrait as a Young Man (1628); (2) Head of Christ (1648); and (3) Portrait of Nicolaes Ruts (1631).
Rembrandt used “chiaroscuro,” an Italian term describing the technique of highlighting or encompassing a painting’s subject in light against a dark background. The Italian artist Caravaggio (1573 – 1610) used this technique, and Rembrandt made it world-famous. He used layering of colors and painted with either muted tones or bright hues, depending on his subject. Rembrandt and other Dutch painters in the 17th Century (Dutch Golden Age painters), often applied thick layers of paint (“impasto”) over thinly glazed under-coatings. Beneath the glazing was the original sketch for the painting, often traced or transferred to the wooden panel painting surface using a grid. Rembrandt was actually the first painter of his time to paint primarily on canvas. He had the strong desire to reveal the underlying mysteries of nature in his works, and his portraits are known for their strong, genuine facial expressions and character.
Flemish painter Frans Hals (1582 – 1666) was born in Antwerp, the son of a cloth merchant. He began his career as an art restorer and first gained recognition for his life-size group portrait, The Banquet of the Officers of the St. George Militia Company, in 1611. His most famous portrait was probably his painting of Rene Descartes in 1649. His style has been described as intimate realism with a dramatically free approach.
Hals popularized the technique of “alla prima” (Italian for “at first”), using a ‘wet on wet’ painting method. These paintings were usually completed in one sitting without waiting for one layer to dry before applying the next. Alla prima became the favored oil painting method of the Impressionist movement in painting. Colors were quickly combined and mixed on a palette and applied to small areas of canvas, using a flat, fan shaped brush for smoothing. Hals also often used a badger brush, much like the wide brushes used today for house and outdoor painting.
Gustave Courbet (1819 – 1877) was born into a prosperous farming family in Omans. Leader of the Realist art movement in France in the 19th Century, he initiated the vital bridge which Realism became between the Romantic painters (Géricault and Delacroix) and the Impressionists. Courbet was a bold innovator who often incorporated strong tones of social commentary in his art. He often declared that the only regime he belonged to was the regime of liberty. He was admired as a hero of the French avant-garde, and he became a great inspiration to the younger Impressionist generation of painters such as Manet.
The modern-day Denver, CO, graphic designer, illustrator and artist, Shane Burke, produces high quality works of art in many diverse media. He uses the media of oil and acrylic paints, water colors, charcoal, pen and ink, and many more. In addition, he is an excellent graphic artist and quite proficient in the use of digital graphics and computer programs such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Indesign, Final Cut, Dream Weaver, Flash, Premiere and Toon Boom. He has completed numerous professional assignments in the fields of film and entertainment, video production, motion graphics, book illustration, and Web development and design.
Shane’s fine art pieces appear in many collections, and among his most admired works are his portraits in diverse media.
Shane Burke, www.beezink.com
With the current economy in such poor shape, many people have opened up small businesses. New entrepreneurs should consider hiring graphic designers as their top priority. Logos and websites become the face of the business. Having professionally designed literature puts many small startups ahead of the pack.
Shane Burke, www.beezink.com