Originally posted by U4-Welcome
Especially for tweening ? :bouncy:
LOL... as a matter of fact, yes, it works very well for my new fave pet technique.
Airhead is pretty close with his description, though the process he describes is really what I would consider \"intermediate layering.\"
The technique I\'m referring to is very similar to this, but relies on using very, very thin and semi-transparent layers for the intermediates. I swear, I\'ll do a tweening article soon, but here\'s the quickie (of course, I swiped this technique from Thierry Husser and a great article over at Planet Figure (www.planetfigure.com)--though they\'ve moved the original article somewhere).
Basically, do a \"normal\" layering technique, with a base tone, two shadows, and two highlights (or maybe 3 of each, depending on what you want). It\'s fine to be a bit \"rough\" in applying these, as you really want to be blocking in colors at this point. After you\'ve blocked in the colors, starts the \"tweening\" process.
Thin your shadow #2 and #1 really far, almost to wash-like consistency. On the line between the colors, overlap some of the very thin #2 onto the #1, and vice-versa. Do this for each color division. The idea is that the toning of the very thin paint will soften the transitions between colors.
I\'ve done this on a few models now, and I\'m sold on it. It\'s (for me, at least) much easier than wet-blending (never got that down), and gives at least the same results. It\'s also a lot faster than feathering when doing layering (after some practice), and it has the advantage of \"automatically\" doing touch-up.
Full article to come soon, promise!
Edit: found a link to the article that got me started: http://www.planetfigure.com/articles/jaume_face_eng.pdf