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Jason Badower/The Death of Hana Gitelman, Part 2
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| This article is a stub. You can help by expanding it. In particular, this article needs commentaries from Jason's blog for the rest of the blank images. |
Jason Badower shares his original art and comments about his work on The Death of Hana Gitelman, Part 2.
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"In panel 3, I wanted you to believe with her that for a split second she can fly. That an umbrella and faith will hold you aloft despite the unimaginative laws of gravity and physics."
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"My main goal was to communicate a child-like sense of wonder without dismissing the danger. I'm especially happy with the picture of the young Hana in panel 1. I don't often draw children, and I think she looks great, and she has real personality to me. As I joked in an earlier post, 'I just drew the cutest kid... EVER.'"
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Jason draws the outline for page 2.
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"Drawing three totally different Jewish people was fun and interesting. I wish they were somebody as they would probably be nice portraits."
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"My main effort was spent trying to adjust the colours so as we moved forward through each flashback the colours became more vibrant and familiar."
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"It's funny, but for a guy so well versed in action (ex stunt man and black belt martial artist) I'm terrible at comic book action. Laying out this page was akin to pulling teeth."
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"It's almost impossible to communicate all this action in one image. I drew sketch after sketch of the possible layouts, finally being drawn towards this image. It contains what I call 'implied action'. I don't know what she's doing to move the two bald guys (3rd and 4th from left) but it just works. She emanates a convincing energy that makes you believe that something has happened by the sheer power of her movement."
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"Remember, most fights are a series of quick, quick cuts to communicate the action. Imagine that each cut is a panel - a separate image that needs to be depicted. You're looking at close to 100 cuts or more for your average small Jackie Chan fight scene. That's 100 panels or around 20 pages... for a SMALL fight scene. That means you just shelled out $2.95 for what would be a minor fight scene.... Basically a waste of your money as it doesn't progress the plot at all."
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"I know a lot of people are going to snicker that it's because I was drawing a woman undressing. That's only accurate on a very superficial level. The naked body is (arguably) one of the easiest things to draw from a technical level. It's also the first thing most artists learn to draw. It's why life drawing the naked figure is recommended as one of the best ways to improve one's drawing. So it stands to reason that the (semi) naked figure is where I'm going to be able to mentally go back to basics and re-evaluate this style."
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"After I had drawn the lineart, I layered underneath a black and white page of ink wash splatters. I would then tone that layer using the Burn and Dodge tool in Photoshop. As I mentioned, it was a nice technique, but it was kinda... rough."
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"When you've made progress in your craft, sometimes you can look over your shoulder and realize that all the baby steps have taken you a mile. Sometimes, just sometimes you can point to one page, perhaps one image as the key point where you stepped up to another level. Panel 4 is that image for me."
Notes about Jason's drawings are taken from his weblog.