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I posted a drawing that I made in 2001 in my socials, mostly for laughs, but then a bunch of people told me to redraw it and honestly, that seemed like a fun idea! Here’s the original: 

And the new version: 


The full process vid is above! It’s sped up 4x, so not too fast. The drawing took me about 2.5 hours to make and my main focus was on capturing a similar color scheme / makeup look as the original. Some things to notice while watching the video: 

FLIPPING THE IMAGE

I usually don’t flip the image too often during the process because it takes me further away from the original composition, but for portraits like this, I’ve been doing this more and more often. This is mainly because the picture is so lopsided when I turn it the other way, and correcting these issues throughout the process keeps this in check. If I don’t flip it, the lopsidedness can get worse and worse as I render!

CREATING LUMINOUS EDGES

Sometimes I like to make the edges of shapes bright and saturated, to give the image an ‘electric’ feel. It creates pops of bright color and makes the colors very vivid. In order to do this, I duplicate the drawing, saturate it, and then use a layer mask to paint in this brighter version only around the edges of the shapes. You can see me doing this at the 13:15 minute mark. Basically it’s just: 

  1. Duplicate the layer and saturate it
  2. Add a layer mask and invert it so everything is hidden
  3. Paint on this mask with a white brush. Wherever you paint with white, the saturated colors will show. 
  4. Once you’re done, merge it together!

Hope you enjoy the video and let me know if you have any questions! 

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Comments

Anonymous

How do you get such dynamic lines and line value? I especially struggle with this on procreate!

Jae

This is so helpful! I’ve been trying to incorporate more rim light in my own work and it always managed to fall short, so I’ll try this out!

Inara

I love these colors! And thanks for the tips. I'm mostly a traditional artist wanting to learn more digital painting so breaking down your process is helpful.

Anonymous

I love watching these. Do you prefer Photoshop over procreate?

Anonymous

Thank you so much for your tips, they've helped a lot. I've always been a fan of the wedge like brush you've used in this in the first half, how did you make it?

Anonymous

Imagine going back in time and telling 2001 Lois she'll draw like that xD

Rob Callicotte

Appreciate this opportunity. So much to do and enjoy and learn.

Loish

haha at that age I had no idea that I was really going to go into art. I thought I was going to be an anthropologist or historian. :')

Loish

that is the pencil brush by macalabs! you can find it here: https://cubebrush.co/macalabs/products/trita/macalabs_sketching-photoshop-brushes

Loish

I definitely prefer photoshop! I think mainly because it's the program I used the most throughout my life and it's just more comfortable for me.

Loish

it helps to sketch loosely and use a brush that mimics pencil! maxpacks gouache set has some great brushes for sketching in procreate!

Anonymous

Hi, Loish! I've been wondering if it were possible for you to show us your entire process for how you do hair. I've studied most of your videos and know that you rely on the ribbon method, but I feel like that doesn't really show much in terms of the entire process. I know you're super busy, but I just thought I'd let you know my thoughts!

Loish

i will keep that in mind for the future, maybe make a step-by-step for it!

Anonymous

Do you use reference for your rendering? I just cant believe how perfect your shadows are! Maybe its from drawing people ALOT?

Loish

thank you! for this one I didn't use any reference. but I definitely learned a lot from doing reference studies in the past.

Anonymous

Hi Loish! your art is so inspiring! I've been learning a lot with your videos! the lines expression is simply perfect. two questions: does your hard round brush have any texture? and do you use it with minimum diameter shape dynamic? Thank you!

Loish

thanks so much! the round brush has no texture, it's just a smooth one. it has size and opacity set to pressure. i will post more about it soon :)

Anonymous

your electric edges technique reminds me of old printed comics. if the CMYK print process was out of alignment it would give a blurry feel and hurt the eyes slightly. :) Great work!