Posts: 1,089 Location: Austin TX
Tue 22 Dec, 2009 12:09 pm
Hi guys,
Thanks a lot for your feedback.
I find it is sometime surprisingly difficult to reproduce medieval drawings. They seem fairly simple to handle at first glance because of the limited use of perspective but it is very easy to stray and end up with something that looks simply naive, but that does not bring a medieval representation to mind.
I used whatever I had lying on my desk: a couple of clay modeling wooden tools (didn't work for the most part as the leather needs to be cut), my leather punching owl for the most part (did alright but scratched the leather too much for my taste)...in the end a regular swivel knife and a few basing leather carving tools I had purchased on ebay. When I draw with pencils, I'm always after a clean line, redoing it until I get it right, but in this case, the leather remembers every hesitations...that's why I'm not satisfied with it (not to mention that the more I look at the face of my little dragon beast, the more I think of Julian the lemurian king of the animated movie Madagascar...which kind of ruins the all thing for me :)
Thanks for your comment Peter, I take all your points and will try a more fluid approach next time, and will not aim at reproducing the illustrations too closely in order to work faster on the damp leather. It's actually the handle of a sword your made a while ago that decided me to give it a go myself. I'd love to see a pict of the dagger you mention though :)
I have to practice with the swivel knife. It is one of those awkward U shaped things to rest the index finger at the top (I'm not sure why...if only it was shaped like a regular pen...as I find it very unconfortable to control).
Peter Johnsson wrote: |
but this kind of work is never "that" perfect. |
I like that idea, that knifes/daggers grips and scabbard might have been engraved by their owner simply at the tip of a knife, during some iddle moment of a siege or simply while guarding sheeps :)
I'll post my second attempt when I'll have time to try again.
Cheers,
J
ps: I like that scissors case of yours Al!