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2D Game Art for Programmers: Part 3 (gamasutra.com)
76 points by Impossible on Oct 28, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 12 comments



Thanks for the positive feedback, guys... I will continue working on more 'simple magic' bits to keep the series and the blog going... I am just having way too much fun with it...

Gamasutra

Part 1: http://gamasutra.com/blogs/ChrisHildenbrand/20111015/8669/2D...

Part 2: http://gamasutra.com/blogs/ChrisHildenbrand/20111019/8692/2D...

Part 3: http://gamasutra.com/blogs/ChrisHildenbrand/20111027/8713/2D...

Blogger

http://2dgameartforprogrammers.blogspot.com/


He's also posting these on his blog [1], where you can subscribe and never miss another great tutorial.

[1]: http://2dgameartforprogrammers.blogspot.com/


All you have to do to draw awesome stuff if start drawing this awesome stuff, then draw some awesome stuff, and then you've drawn some awesome stuff! WHAT'S NOT TO GET?!

Programming for 2D game artists: copy this text that does some cool stuff. It does some cool stuff! There you go, then.

As I think others have pointed out on this series, it still just seems like magic. Sure, hitting it with a hammer is easy, but knowing where to hit is the art.


yeah, i feel the same way. I could copy the things he's doing and make them look decent, maybe even as good as he does with some practice but using those basics to create my own designs? Magic. I'm a creative person when it comes to certain things but with this type of visual art i just don't get it for whatever reason.


I think the key (and I'm saying this as a fulltime programmer), is to learn how to see things as an artist. I had a fantastic art teacher my last year of high school, and for a month or two, I think I understood how to look at things in a different way. I have two drawings and a painting from those few months, and they're some of my favorite possessions.

I've since forgotten how I managed do make them, but I think that's largely from a lack of practice.


I feel a similar way when trying to learn something new that looks/feels like magic. The tutorials are simple enough and give awesome results but for some reason I don't get it. After much practice eventually something clicks and it turns out that there was no magic, it really is as simple as claimed.

I think that it seems like magic to us because our brain refuses to believe that it is that simple. But specially because we lack the practice. After much practice eventually a threshold is reached and the brain decides that you've been exposed to enough patterns and nothing else is left to learn and that is when "it just clicked" happens. At least that is what I think is happening. Your brain is protecting you from claiming you've learned something new without enough practice.


If you want to draw cool cartoon characters that aren't just precise copies of an online tutorial, pick up a pencil and draw a person from life. It'll suck, but do it in earnest a few dozen times, and pretty soon you'll have an idea of how to distort reality into cartoons.

These tutorials are the end result of a lot of invisible rule-breaking (a nose looks like x, a hand looks like y, etc.). You can't break these rules intelligently unless you know what they are. And since everyone has access to reality and a pencil, there's nothing preventing anyone from discovering the rules.


This is the biggest hurdle for those with a 'I can't draw a stick figure if my life depended on it' attitude. Hand drawing takes a lot of practice and determination to get past the initial 'this looks like sh' stages..

I agree with you as far as the experience and the analysing of shapes goes... and yes... the next step after reading the tutorials should be to go and play with the shapes and create something new, experiment and find your own way of doing things. From some of the feedbacks I received that is happening for quite a few users that go through the steps and then turn the simple circles into an owl, a tiger or a dragon. Something they would not have created from scratch with pen and paper as they lacked the self esteem and believe in their art creation skill.

I tried to go a different way in the tutorials to give the readers a simple approach towards 'constructing' elements from basic building blocks - rather than struggle with perspective and proportion.


I had to go to the first part to find out what tool he's using for the drawings. It is InkScape -- a free vector drawing tool. Installing now.

Great job on the tutorial. While I'm a dev and not an artist, I still get a rush of awe when I see how easy he makes it look to draw some of these things.


Just so you know, there are tutorials in Inkscape's Help menu as well to help with a lot of the basics. If you ever run into any issues, feel free to pop in our IRC channel and ask away. Also, if you tweet anything containing "inkscape" in the message, chances are one of us will respond in less than 12 hours (most of the time).

For the record, since you're a "dev and not an artist", we have people in our community that will contribute art in exchange for your time if you were to contribute code to Inkscape.


I tried getting onto the irc channel to talk a bit about the tutorials but the channel wouldn't let me send - neither with the web tool nor with trillian... ;(


Unfortunately there is a registration requirement. I will check with JonCruz to see if freenode ever gave him admin status and if he'd be kind enough to remove that restriction (that is if it's on our end with the channel and not the server's).




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