Completed [NSFW]Moona - Pegaso 80mm

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redhorse

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 6, 2008
Messages
432
Location
DFW, TX
Here's my version of Pegaso's Moona. I did this one in oils and I really enjoyed painting the figure. I do really like the added touch they gave with the owl. I'm not completely pleased with the results, though. Red and black seem very difficult to paint. Although, from what I'm reading here at PF, I'm not the only one who finds this to be the case, just most of you guys seem to pull it off better than me.
 

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it might be the oils, but the shadows and highlights seem to be on the very low side. Besides that I love the skin tones. This is gonna look great on the rack..I mean shelf.
 
Thanks everyone for stopping by, I appreciate all the comments!

I don't think it's the oils, Mike. The shadows and highlights are on the low side, but it gives me something to improve on and keep painting!
 
This looks every bit the work of a master, and the subtle variation in flesh tone is particularly admirable given the well intended exaggerations of the sculpted female form.

May I venture some kind of control over the flash light so that the pictures could allow a better understanding of how the red and black parts are handled here, so that aspired amateurs (me) could all learn a thing or two?

For thirty quid each, I am a proud collector of three girl kits off Pegaso's 80mm series. In hind sight this should have been one of those. What a beautiful owl!
 
Well done from head to toe!

What's your camera setup? Tripod? Ambient, flash, or defused light?

Cheers,

Glen
 
Thanks Glen, Michael & Alex!

Here's the story on the pics - I recently bought a new Canon 60D. I'm having fun with it, but it's a lot more complicated than my old point and shoot. I took it camping last weekend and got some very nice outdoor shots, but the closeups are more difficult as I don't have a macro lens. So instead of that, I put it on a tripod and then zoom in to get close to the figure and use the smallest aperture I can in order to get some depth of field. I used a light tent for these with the overhead on and a desk lamp from the side as well. I shot these in RAW and then had to convert to jpg and shrink them down in order to upload them to the site.

If I get some some time tonight, I'll take some more of this fig and some other ones I want to post. I'm going to try without the desk lamp from the side and try shooting just in jpg at the smallest file size. Practice makes perfect (I hope!).
 
I took a few more pictures tonight with a white background and no side light. I think the lighting in the first ones is more dramatic, but these are probably clearer. Not sure which ones are better though...
 

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Try a gray background. 18% gray from a camera store or a medium gray poster paper from a craft store (Michael's, Hobby Lobby, etc). Unless you can spot meter, the camera is reading much of the black or white background and overexposing or underexposing the figure. You might try using two sidelights as well; they will cancel each other's cast shadows.

I made a light box from a cardboard box and vellum on the sides and top. I light the figure from the sides, top, and front, using daylight bulbs and the proper white balance setting on the camera and shoot off a tripod. I use the macro setting for small figures - 30mm gaming minis - and the zoom function for larger figures.

I put flats on a scanner - no muss, no fuss.

Cheers,

Glen
 
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