Tutorial - Work in Progress

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May 2002

Hello my millions of fans! (Sid & Doris Bonkers)

One of the questions I'm most often asked (not in relation to the Brighton Murders) is how I go about making one of my trademark images. Well the full gory truth is about to be revealed as, for the first time, thanks to the miracle of computer technology, I'm going to take you through a painting from start to finish, by scanning in the painting during it's development, including materials, size, techniques, reference etc. Then I'm going to try and sell it to you as a deluxe limited print! My audacity knows no bounds!

OK the first installment (pencils and design) will appear on the site around May 27th.

I already know what I'm going to do, but I have some top secret work on for Marvel comics which has to take priority for the time being.




Stage One

28 May 2002

Two days late due to wrong sort of leaves on the line! A quick rough - in with black coloured pencil, establishing proportions.(yes I know it is off the page... due to A4 scanner!!)




Stage Two

May 30th - Hello computer people

First a quick word of apology - I am not exactly launching into my print painting at a brain twisting rate of knots. This is basically because I am off on holiday from May 31st to June 10th (seven days with Nikki and the kids, 3 days on the piss near Belfast with various comic types) and had to fit things in to my schedule so to ensure the weekly wage slip (self-employed people will understand this). I promise I'll have it done as soon as possible - before the end of June, probably earlier, if I survive. I'll give you details about the Belfast thing, sort of 'what I did on my holiday' and hopefully will be able to spill the beans on my TOP SECRET Marvel project. Not literally of course. It'd be all sticky. Hope everyone had a great time at Bristol - see you there next year.

Cheers! Glenn

P.S. Come back and see us around June 11-12th - will be more on this project then.

Stage Two - 13 June 2002

Hi everyone out there in computerland. Sorry about the delay in getting back to you but, let's face it, everyone needs a holiday, and I've just had mine - seven days at Centerparcs with Nikki and the kids, and then three hard drinking days in Belfast with comic superstars Garth Ennis, John Macrae, Darrick Robertson off of Transmet and Tony Bedard who had loads of salacious sex talk from Florida in between the rounds of alcohol and the terrifying speedboat ride! So I can guess which one you would like to hear about! So here goes.

Well, Centerparcs is a great break for a young family, you can take it easy, breathe fresh air, frolic contentedly in their spacious swimming pools and enjoy the bike riding and nature trails and settle back into a relaxed, almost rural pace of life. Of course for the more adventurous amongst us you can always take a fitness class or go horse riding, but remember it's best to take nanny and granpops so you'll have someone to look after the kids while you are out 'larging it' at the 70's and 80's disco in plaza one.

Anyway I'm back to do the stage by stage painting thing, so. You've seen the rough scribble that makes up Stage One? Well now's the time for a slightly more informed scribble, refining the elements you intend to capture in your piece. Do we add an aardvark? Shall we put in a small biplane over the crotch area? Now's the time to decide.

Next stop adding some colour. See you tomorrow....

Email question from Dale Rushforth on 16/06/02

hi glenn - I`d really like to know what materials you are using for your print? are you using ordinary pencil straight onto board or layout paper. I would also like to know what you thoughts are while creating this image what your ideas are what reference you are using if any on an unconnected note (sort of) how do you go about lighting a picture. I find this quite hard and you often have objects or people backlit and have multiple light sources that are quite complicated to think about do you just learn by observation? - thanks Dale

Materials are; CS10 Media 6 art board, Windsor and Newton acrylic paints, coloured pencils (not the water soluble kind), ball point pens, Liquitex colours, a toothbrush, and Daler watercolour brushes.

References - so far I have only used one piece of reference for the face; it's not an exact guideline but it's similar and it's got the lighting I want.

Lighting a picture is hard but you have to go with what looks right on your image. I tell you what, 'Poser', the 3D art tool on computer can be very helpful in this regard. I might knock one up (not in the American sense) just to show you but so far this is it as far as references is concerned. I'll include anything else I use as I go along.-Glenn



Stage Three

Stage Three - 15 June 2002

What I am doing here is putting down a base colour in acrylic that gives me a, erm, base to work on. I used to use a really heavy burnt umber or Prussian blue scrub, but what with the layers of wash I'd be using, the paintings were all getting too dark, so now I'm using a wishy washy burnt sienna to begin with. You can use acrylics impasto like oils or transparent like watercolour, so you can build up from dark to light and build down from light to dark.

A 'wash' is when you have got a big watercolor brush and wipe a fairly diluted colour across your image: This deepens the tone and gives a more gradual transition between the light and dark areas. Then you can go into it again, make the darks darker and the highlights lighter. If you do this enough times you can get an airbrush type finish. I'm also using coloured pencils for extra 'modelling'.



Stage Four

Stage Four- 16 June 2002

Disaster Strikes!

Sometimes if the top is loose you paint tubes clog up, and you have to dig out a clump of dried colour before you can use the bloody things. So I'm squeezing my tube of cadmium red and it all spurts out after a blockage in an unsettlingly ejaculatory manner, narrowly missing the poor girls face (© reader wives letters page...).
A note on character: The idea was to do a series of page three type girls with a cowboy theme as independently-produced prints. Why 'cowboy?' Well last year I was finishing Preacher,starting on Outlaw Nation, and getting paid my highest ever fee for the cover of 'Desperados' computer game for American Infogrames, all western- based material, so when we thought about doing some prints, it seemed a natural choice. Why girls? Well, girls are very popular with, er, all humanity.

I was going to start with a rootin-tootin cowgirl Jane type but went for a Native American girl instead after reading Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian. The idea with her is she's just run in with the wagon train and hacked the dress off one of the seven brides for seven brothers.



Stage Five

Stage Five- 17 June 2002

Email question from Jordan Henderson on 18/06/02

On 18 June - About your print.....I really really want to know....Hey Glenn, thanks a lot for the ongoing tutorial, its looking awesome. You listed all the materials that you used, I would like to know when and where would you use a ball point biro pen on your print, also when and where would you use a toothbrush? Just out of interest. A few other people and I are following your tutorial, it has been really helpful!! Also, when I am painting in acrylic I always find it really difficult to add detail, to skin, clothes and hair etc, any tips for that?Thanks again, Jordan Henderson

Hi Jordan. Nikki's done a close up of Minnie ha-ha's arm so hopefully you'll be able to see where I've used toothpaste splatter - it kind of adds tone and texture, and you can work into it and use some of the aberrations that show up. I use ball-point pen (either red or black generally) to boost outlines - since the ink is waterproof it's useful when you do as many washes as I do. Adding fine detail in acrylic - buy Liquitex and use a tiny brush! If yo still have difficulties, use gouache (but remember not to put colour washes over it afterwards).



Stage Six

- 17 June 2002

Dale asks about light sources, and I said I'd do a mock up on Poser 4 to show the quick and easy way to do it, so here it is:

I also decided to change her bottle-holding arm a bit because I thought this position was a little more cocky. You can also pinpoint highlight areas by messing about with the render materials section (see little figure). Poser can be helpful but they're still little plastic Barbie figures with the arses all wrong. What it is good for is proportions, foreshortening and shadows.



Stage Seven

18 June 2002





Stage Eight

19 June 2002

Okay folks - this is the last scan before the painting's finished. It's a full-figure shot on the painting, A3 dimensions and size. As I stated earlier on, it will be available as a deluxe signed and numbered print limited to 999 copies which is only available from this site or my rare personal appearances at conventions. Actually, I'll be showing up at the opening of an envelope next year, (probably with 998 prints under my arm - my mum wants one) as they'll be quite a few things to push - The Authority Book, my TOP SECRET Marvel project, the Other Authority book (also by Mr Ennis) and, god help us all, my Vertigo pitch (if it's successful).

In the meantime you could help keep me in beer and fags (cigarettes to our American visitors) by simply purchasing this wonderful piece of artwork



Stage Nine

25 June 2002

Okay kids, the paintings all done now, all the feathers and the furry boots and bloodstains are all rendered and it's at the printers being made up into 999 prints, suitable for framing or to be used as a sumptuous paper aeroplane. The thing is they're on sale: it's a bit of a gamble for us here at Fabry Studios, me taking a week out and stumping up the cost of the printing etc, but if enough of you out there buy it, it'll be the first in a line of cowboy girl prints and a new business venture for us here: self publishing!

Each print A3 sized on thick glossy art paper in full colour, will be individually signed and numbered by me and my Uncle Alan (no, just me: Alan's sprained his wrist hiking) and I'll be happy to write any dedications you like in any language of you give me the spelling.

They are reasonably priced at THE REDUCED RATE OF £20 (US $30) including post and packaging, and if you try to print it off the site you'll get a rude message over the chest area and will be reincarnated as a squirrel (actually that sounds like a bonus - ignore that bit). Help me feed my family!

Help me pay my tax bills!

Help me buy more paint!

See directions below for how to pay, and remember - we love you all! Except Brian from Leicester. He's a pain in the arse!

This is an small scan of my A3 print. It is a full figure shot with background and border, professionally printed on high quality glossy thick paper (without the words obviously...)and it is suitable for framing etc but also looks really great unframed.

Purchase by PayPal, money order or postal order, cheque (made payable to Glenn Fabry) etc. Send cash at your own risk but it's better signed for.

If you would like a dedication on it I'll be more than happy to oblige.

Costs are $30 (around£20) including postage and packing

Please allow two weeks for delivery.

Send money etc.to my studio address at;
Glenn Fabry Studios, 116 Rodmell Avenue, Saltdean, Brighton, East Sussex, United Kingdom, BN2 8PJ.

You can print out the details and an order form here....

You can pay by Paypal here.......

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