Thank you Bill. I ken noo as they say in Scotland.
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Thank you Bill. I ken noo as they say in Scotland.
Problem fixed, Eric.
ron
Gorgeous!
Until Eric mentioned it, I never noticed the headlamp being on the viewers side of the mud guard (fender).
This is my new favorite of all your drawings. Something about the classic design simply grabs my attention. :)
I agree with you Bill. All Rons car images are great but this one is very special.Quote:
This is my new favorite of all your drawings. Something about the classic design simply grabs my attention.
Ron, after you've been looking at a creation hour after hour, usually over several days, it's very easy to miss the obvious.
I want one!..amazing ron!!!!!!!
The best yet, Ron
Wonderful stuff .
Jim Toal
SUPERB Put me down for one
Regards
amotl
I hope this isn't an insult to anyone, but I really want to learn this. Do you guys start with a traced bitmap of an image or do you draw the entire picture from the ground up?
Crypto have you used pencil or pen & ink on paper to draw? Using a vector graphics program is similar to that, only pencils and pens do not have an undo button :) .
Do you have Xtreme or another program that you use?
If you are beginning without any experience, it is best to learn what each tool does. Gary Priester's XaraXone has many resources to help you learn. The Workbooks and Webxealot section have tutorials that tell what each tool in Xara X (these apply to X¹, Xtreme, and Xtreme Pro) can do and how it can be used.
If you want to learn to use Xtreme, I recommend reading some of the Workbooks at http://www.xaraxone.com and you can always post any questions in the Xara Xtreme forum.
Crypto,
There is a tutorial, I believe, in the xaraone as mentioned by Bill. All, but a very few, of my drawings of cars/motorcycles are done with the help of a photograph placed on an uneditable layer in Xara. This allows me to trace the various parts of the photo and color/shade/transparency/blend etc. to emulate the photo itself.
I'm speaking for myself only, of course, but I don't think I would want to put in the time to do it any other way.
I have recently done a drawing of a chopper (motorcycle) which was all my own creation "from the ground up" as you put it. I've also done a couple of cars that way. EXTREMELY time consuming in that it takes a lot of research to get the details right.
Hope this helps.
Thanks all for your kind words.
ron