The process for creating my final piece was relatively simple. As I did before with my Goldsworthy recreation, I took a piece of paper and—with my new printer ink—selected twenty-four pieces of my art, ranging from August of last year to April of this year, created a contact sheet, printed it out, cut out each of the pieces and laid them out in a ring on top of a sheet of paper. I then took another sheet of paper and folded it in half to place in the background, acting as two walls and a corner where the floor and two walls meet at the bottom.
After photographing this, with an orange lamp glow in the background and my phone's camera's flash feature, I imported it into Photoshop, adjusted the exposure, offset, brightness and contrast, then saved it, imported that into FireAlpaca, and created layers on which I drew using colours from a Pantone Solid Coated guide PDF file. I opted for the pink layers to remain lineless and without any median filtering through PaintNET to smooth them out.
Above is the actual final piece. As for the pit in the middle of the image, I drew a line to distinguish the exposed area of the paper 'floor' below and the white edges of the printed images themselves. I then rounded the corners inside—and one outside—of the lineart, as is my 'signature' with any piece with lineart. The printed images themselves, viewed up closer, have a very strange printing error in which the printer has not properly aligned, so especially with lineart, colours are displaced, making for a 'glitch' effect, which I personally believe enhances the image and its zany vibes.
I also did not forget about my other Pinterest board! I started this before I began my Gildersleeve recreation but was too caught up amid my inspiration to create to have posted it here. I also felt it would have been redundant to limit it to its own singular post as there would not have been a lot to say about it on its own without the contextual assistance of the other images here. The common colour theme of this board is blue and purple, with the occasional red, yellow or green. I decided to stick to the harmonious purple and pink range, as is also my favoured range of colours in art, when creating both a recreation of Gildersleeve's work and a mini-recreation in a combination of three different artists.
My wording is not so good; it eventually turns into mindless rambling.
Finally, here is the sketch I had produced when planning out this final piece. I had originally planned for Gildersleeve's section to be a doorway with its own frame, varying in colours, but had opted for a simpler route, and went for a wall leading outward, appearing as a turn to the left-hand side leading behind the viewer's point of view, and almost up a case of stairs, too. One major mistake I made in producing the final piece was in the Gildersleeve aspect.
Due to PaintNET not being involved in the creation, I had not created drop shadows underneath each layer. This is also due to the darker shades being drawn on top of filled in lighter shades, meaning there was no sections empty for the darker shades to go underneath. This is mainly due to me having done this at an uninspired and inopportune time, a.k.a in the morning after having overslept and still in pyjamas. Otherwise, I am fairly happy with this final piece and am excited as to whatever my next project will be.
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