After watching my new video "How I Paint Dinosaurs," paleoartist Mick Ellison sent me the following description of how he makes maquettes, and he was kind enough to permit me to share the information with you:
Reference maquettes by paleoartist Mick Ellison |
Reference maquette of Sinornithosaurus by Mick Ellison |
"You can move along pretty quickly after you get the hang of it. I like this shot because it looks like the dinosaur is wearing feathered trousers!"
Mick Ellison's pencil drawing in progress |
Mick wrote the following blurb about my video--thanks, Mick!
Sr. Principal Artist
Department of Paleontology
American Museum of Natural History
"How I Paint Dinosaurs is a fascinating, detailed look into the making of the masterful dinosaur creations of James Gurney. I loved following his creative process, from the initial ideas, through the scientifically informed and accurate paleo-reconstructions, to the final stunning artwork. I found this video to be extremely informative and creative, and I have to say that I was completely inspired to draw dinosaurs!"—Mick Ellison,
Sr. Principal Artist
Department of Paleontology
American Museum of Natural History
"How I Paint Dinosaurs" by James Gurney, digital download, 53 minutes, HD 720p. (Via Paypal)
buy
or at Gumroad via credit card. How I Paint Dinosaurs
And thanks to Mark Frauenfelder, founder of BoingBoing for doing a post about the new video
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Edit: For other maquette building techniques, wee also the previous post on Sea Monsters, and on Microraptor
or at Gumroad via credit card. How I Paint Dinosaurs
And thanks to Mark Frauenfelder, founder of BoingBoing for doing a post about the new video
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Edit: For other maquette building techniques, wee also the previous post on Sea Monsters, and on Microraptor
Cool post! Mick's pencil drawing looks great!
ReplyDeleteLove the ideas of making maquettes by you and Mick.
ReplyDeleteBTW, my copy of How I Paint Dinosaurs arrived yesterday and I jumped right into it. Excellent vid!
Interesting connection.
ReplyDeleteI am a fly fisher in Oregon, and the mention of the Caddis Fly Shop in Eugene, OR out of all the possible resources for such feathers on the net caught my attention.
Bill
I've considered making paper cut-out maquettes, but never got around to it. I'm delighted they work as well as I suspected they would.
ReplyDeleteCraig, for quick paper cutout maquettes, see also these previous posts:
ReplyDeletehttp://gurneyjourney.blogspot.com/2010/10/sea-monster-part-3.html
and http://gurneyjourney.blogspot.com/2008/03/microraptor.html
The feather district of NYC??!!
ReplyDeleteNow I've heard it all!
James, I remember the microraptor from your book, which I thought was a lovely, simple, and elegant way to build a maquette of certain winged creature. I like the little foam streams for water on the sea monster and the tip to photograph it under natural light.
ReplyDelete