00:00
00:00
Newgrounds Background Image Theme

RamsesTimeGame just joined the crew!

We need you on the team, too.

Support Newgrounds and get tons of perks for just $2.99!

Create a Free Account and then..

Become a Supporter!

Bailaora

Share

I made this image just to test out this female anatomy dummy I had made [can be found in my gallery] I liked the image so I decided to paint it. I didn't expect it to take so long to make but now here it is over 10 hours of work.


This painting started off with making a gray scale image, then adding flat colors to it and the final step was to texture it to give the skin and clothes a realistic pattern to it.


Even though this was a test image I'm glad how it turned out at the end. I learned one important thing from this: Feet are VERY difficult to make from this angle. If you want to see a close up of her face you can find it at opelm.com

Log in / sign up to vote & review!

I can see this is a practice and that you got your own judgement right. The only other thing I can see wrong though is her left leg, it looks a bit missplaced.

But what I really wanted to say is that somehow her facial features really reminds me to an andalusian woman, and it's not just because of the dress, believe me I'm from there.
I also like the dress, it is full of details which make it look more realistic.

It's been a while since I commented on an english-speaking site, so sorry for the possible mistakes :P

Blud-Shot responds:

Thanks for your comment I actually learned something I didn't know about Andalusian until you mentioned it! You are right she does look like an Andalusian woman. Yea the left leg does have a problem. I wasn't able to see it while I was making the painting but I don't change it as a reminder of what I need to fix in the future.

Credits & Info

Views
4,884
Faves:
1
Score
Waiting for 3 more votes

Uploaded
May 4, 2012
12:58 PM EDT
Category
Illustration

You might also enjoy...

Licensing Terms

You are free to copy, distribute and transmit this work under the following conditions:

Attribution:
You must give credit to the artist.
Noncommercial:
You may not use this work for commercial purposes.
No Derivative Works:
You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work.