top of page

Process Quackity

quackity in pp.png

Here's a time-lapse of the sketch I made!

It's a very rough sketch.

This  became a small problem later on, but I really wanted to move on and make the background!

After I finished the sketch, I made a screenshot of the dia and pasted that on another dia. This way I did not have to worry about accidentally moving parts of the sketch while making the background

schets quackity.png
achtergrond quackity.png

The background!

I started off by making a rough sketch of where which color should be using the marker tool. After that, I drew a lot of lines using the same colors I started with,  but with small changes; a little bit darker, lighter, more saturated etc.

Making this took wayy more layers of lines than I thought, but it was fun to try and find the right colors!

After finishing the background I started working on Quackity (the person in the picture). I selected the screenshot of the sketch and made it the top layer. 

The original picture has a decent amount of grain in it which gave his coat different colors. I tried to match those different areas and colors.

Funnily enough, making his hat was the hardest part. I could not get the shape right and i kept messing up the colors. After spending way too much time on it, I decided to leave it like it was.

process quackity.png
more process quackity.png

When I was happy with the first layer of colors I made, I deleted the sketch and fixed some areas I missed. (Like the white line in his neck) 

After that, I started the line layering process. I kept drawing lines in mildly different colors until everything looked (semi) smooth.

Here is a time-laps of how I drew Quackity!

I had a lot of problems making this time-laps, but now I know how to make them properly! Apparently there is an option for recording what you do in pp!

final quackity not cropped.png

This is what the final dia looks like. I really like it that you can see small parts of the process when you look at the whole dia instead of the cropped version. 

You can see the first layer I made with the markers for the background and you can even see all the individual base color lines if you look closely.

quackity reference.png
quackity in pp.png
bottom of page