
Originally Posted by
ScottEwen
I wanted to give you a little tip on the pages so far. I hope you don't mind, but I think there's a lot of room for improvement in what I'm seeing here. I'm not sure if these are finished pages but the colors seem to be very saturated, and there's not enough separation of tones to pop out the focal points. If you take these pages and convert them to grayscale, everything is pretty much the same color gray.
I like the idea of doing everything in one color depending on the scene, but if you're doing that I would suggest popping out planes that are closer to us with lighter shades. I've attached a page that I recolored very quickly (with a crappy mouse because I don't have my Wacom installed on this computer; please forgive how sloppy it is) to give you an idea what I mean. In each panel, it's very clear what is the focal point immediately because there's a contrast with the darker background. Even when you convert this to grayscale you can tell what's going on quickly and easily.
What I would probably do, however, to retain the monochromatic idea while still having everything be fully colored (having your cake and eating it too, in a way), is color everything in the scene like normal but then overlay a color layer on top at 20-40% opacity. I do that often for night time scenes (overlaying a blue layer on top) or a bright summer daytime scene (overlaying a yellow or bright orange layer), or sometimes just to unite the colors in a scene together.
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