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A print is available on our store for this one for those who are interested.
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Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple | Deir El Bahri, Egypt
The epic architecture and orange underlighting make Hatshepsut’s temple a dead ringer for D’ni… Once you crop out the blue sky, anyway.
The one place I wasn’t able to go during my stay in Luxor. I had spent too long in the sun sketching in the city and spent the day we were due to go to Hatshepsut’s in bed ill. Of course I didn’t learn from this and later in the week I did the same thing whilst I was sketching the streets in Aswan.
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We were given the complete set of Harry Potter movies for Christmas. So we’ve been watching our way through them with the kids. As a result this mornings speed painting was of some random dark wizard.
Done in Alchemy with some colour tweaks in Photoshop, took about an hour.
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I realized the moment I fell into the fissure that the book would not be destroyed as I had planned. It continued falling into that starry expanse, of which I had only a fleeting glimpse. I have tried to speculate where it might have landed, but I must admit that such conjecture is futile. Still, questions about whose hands might one day hold my Myst book are unsettling to me. I know my apprehensions might never be allayed, and so I close, realizing that perhaps the ending has not yet been written.
This bad boy is now available as a print: Fissure Print
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The Temple of the Falling Star is a small temple within the Vaal’lin city and sister to the Temple of the Rising Star which resides in another Age. The two temples are linked together by a thread that goes beyond space and time.
My wife and I love Doctor Who, so for this Christmas I wanted to do something slightly different for her. River Song is one of our favorite characters (along with Captain Jack) so I wanted to make River’s famous blue book.
Book cover was made from cardboard bound with faux leather and painted with several layers of blues to build up the highlights.
Pages are simply stained with coffee to age them. Images and text were a combination of images printed and worked into with ink, paint and pencil and straight up drawings done by hand.
The cover could use a little more work but it turned out pretty well and my wife loved it (combined it with a Tardis Key) which is the important thing.