Showing posts with label ffg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ffg. Show all posts

Monday, August 9, 2021

Designing the Fashion Forward Trandoshan

If you know me or my work at all, you will know of my love for Star Wars and, in particular, the alien reptilian species, the Trandoshans. For decades, the bounty hunter Bossk from the Empire Strikes Back was the beginning and end of what Trandoshans were. Over the years, the species was fleshed out, and more examples of these space lizards can be seen in various comics, toys, and cartoons. When I began working on the Fantasy Flight Star Wars games, I made it clear I wanted to paint as many Trandoshans as they would give me. What I didn't tell them is that I had a plan to establish a look at feel for the armor and attire for the Trandoshans I would illustrate. I am not sure if anyone noticed or cared, but I went about coming up with my take on a Trandoshan esthetic, and I wanted to use today's post to share what I had been working on and how the designs varied and what they meant. 

Everything began with a quarter-page illustration that focused on the AT-PT walker, but since it was described as having two Trandoshans in it, I quickly made them the piece's focus. Here is that piece.

AT-PT 
Edge of the Empire
7 x 10 - Digital
© 2013 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

I do not recall how the Trandoshans were described, but I envisioned them as a scout group for a military-level operation. I don't think the Trandoshans had a standing military during the Empire, but if they did, I saw them wearing heavy armor, camouflage, and long, scaled armored coats. There is still some mix and match going on, but they are moving light in hostile territory with a walker for support. While I still like how this piece turned out, I knew my look for the Trandoshans was still not realized.

Trandoshan Hunter
Imperial Assault Summer Organized Play Kit
11 x 14 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Original - SOLD
© 2015 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

This piece, the Trandoshan Hunter, was where the look for the Trandoshans finally took shape. This was the second of my Trandoshan pieces for FFG and was the first to allow me the room and freedom to focus on the figures and attire and to explore their clothing and equipment. These pair of space lizards are very much in the vein of Boosk. They are hunters and prepared for anything. They are armored, have plenty of bags, pouches, and bandoliers, and have an array of weapons and devices on their gauntlets. I am pulling from established Star Wars motifs and styles as well as throwing on a lot of my design choices. I still look to this piece as a prime example of 'my' Trandoshans.

DXR-6 Disruptor Rifle
Imperial Assault - Core set
10.1 x 9 - Digital
© 2014 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Continuing what I had established, this piece, which highlights a rifle and not the figure, shows off some of the same design choices. Wires, cables, and lights adorn the powered gauntlets that likely bristle with hidden weapons. The layered shoulder and arm armor make a return and there are plenty of straps, bandoleers, and pouches for all your space lizard needs.

Trandoshan Mercenary
Star Wars LCG - Aggressive Negotiation
14 x 11 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Taylor Ingvarsson
Original - NFS
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

While this Mercenary painting was my final contribution to the Star Wars games, it holds true to what I established. The armor and equipment should look familiar at this point. The focus of this piece, the knife, was something I wanted to work into most of the other paintings, but the knife was always lost due to which thumbnails were chosen or that, in the end the knife didn't work in the composition. Here it finally is out and upfront. I felt like Trandoshans would always have blades on them, especially the more villainous of their population.


While I was establishing a dominant look for the Trandoshans, I didn't want that to become the only look. Depending on the portrayal in the assignment, I wanted to give them each their own look and purpose.

Exploring Froz
Edge of the Empire - Suns of Fortune
12 x 14 - Digital
© 2014 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

For the Exploring Froz piece, I wanted to have a Trandoshan more in line with a scientist or first responder. The planet of Froz was completely decimated and these individuals are evaluating the destruction and looking for survivors. I imagined this Trandoshan to be wearing something lighter but still armored. They likely need to cover a lot of ground and will have to overcome many types of rugged terrain. The arms are exposed for easy climbing, but the body is still protected. Less about weapons and more about survival.

Fool Me Once
Star Wars Imperial Assault - Ahsoka Tano Ally Pack
14 x 11 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Deb Freytag
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

In Fool Me Once, I wanted to depict two Trandoshans on the job. These two are working the starport and more for show than action. They have little to no armor, but they have their blasters, some straps and belts, and some gauntlets. They have a waist sash that has the colors of which Hutt employees them and to show off who controls the starport. If you will be paying bribes to get that illegal shipment in, you need to know who the credits need to go to.

Rival Explorer 
Digital
© 2013 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

While the piece was titled Rival Explorer, I wanted to depict a Trandoshan that was neither obviously good nor evil in their dress and depiction. They are merely a rival to the players in the game. This is a neutral depiction of a Trandoshan and should be an example of the non-warrior members of their species. Likely they are pulling influences from many other planets and species and whatever is better for function in the field.

Passk the Trandoshan
Digital
© 2014 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Lastly, we have Passk. He needed to be over the top and fancy. He needed to be very much not like the other Trandoshans that I have painted. I shared some of the design choices for this piece before, but the primary influence for it was the wild red outfit I had my Trandoshan wear in Star Wars Galaxies. The attire in the game was but a starting point, and I pushed it as far as I was allowed to get this look. It was a fun exercise. 

As an added bonus, here are a few images of me posing for Trandoshan reference. You might notice some similar elements in each image and how they translated into the final paintings.

Trandoshan Reference
Photos by Achsa Nute

That's all for another exciting Monday on the blog. See you back here on Wednesday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

May the 4th be With You

It is May the Forth! Here is a small selection of the many Star Wars paintings that I have produced for the FFG Star Wars Games over the years. If you are so inclined, a couple items are still available for sale. I am one with the Force, and the Force is with me.   

Just some of my work on the Star Wars games from Fantasy Flight Games
A mix of digital and traditional pieces
ALL images © 2021 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

That is all for another exciting Tuesday on the blog. See you back here on Wednesday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Trandoshan Mercenary - Star Wars - Process

Today I have you the process and steps that went into my Trandoshan Mercenary painting for the Star Wars LCG set, Aggressive Negotiation. Before we get to that, I wanted to share some thoughts about the significance of this piece. This painting was the very last Star Wars illustration that I produced for Fantasy Flight Games. In fact, this was the final painting of any kind that I created for that company. At the time, I am not sure if I knew it would be, but deep down, I think I might have. I was not originally going to take this assignment. I had gotten into the habit of turning down anything that they offered, but Erik Dahlman specifically wrote this card for me and requested me by name. So I took the job. I had long remarked my wishes to paint a Trandoshan wielding a vibroblade, and there was finally an opportunity in the game for it, so Erik made sure I got that chance. You can't say no to that. 

I had been drifting away from FFG for a while at this point, and I knew it was only a matter of time that I would full severe ties. My opinion of freelance work, in general, was already changing and my attentions were beginning to be solely directed at The Grand Bazaar of Ethra VanDalia. When I started working with FFG in 2009, I never imagined the opportunities and projects I would work on, the fantastic art directors I would work with, and the exposure my work would receive. There were a lot of fun times, but in the end, there was only so long I could keep returning to them for work. If I was going to have a final painting with them, I am glad it was this one. If you are familiar with me, my work, or this blog you know my love for lizard monsters. The Trandoshan bounty hunter, Bossk, is my favorite Star Wars character and I have created many Trandoshans for the FFG games. So at the end, there was one last space lizard monster to paint.

In addition to this being my last painting for FFG, this was the last time I produced a traditionally painted image. I had been shifting back to digital work for my client work, and for my personal work, it has become exclusively a combination of colored pencil, white acrylic, and black ink on paper. If I was going to have a final traditionally painting, for the time being, I am also glad it was this one. I really felt like I was beginning to find a sweet spot with the materials. At the end of the day, I draw when I make art. It might be a pencil, digital stylus, or brush, but I am always drawing. With this painting, I finally felt like I was painting. There are marks that I was making with the brush, and I was laying paint down in new ways. I was really excited by what I did in this piece, which is why I am not parting with it. 

Time to talk about making this final Star Wars painting! To start things off, here is a look at the final version of the Trandoshan Mercenary.

Trandoshan Mercenary
Star Wars LCG - Aggressive Negotiation
14 x 11 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Taylor Ingvarsson
Original - NFS
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

With all of my creations, I started with reference. Since I am not in my underwear this time, I can actually share some of the images that my wife took of me acting out my best space lizard life. At some point, I will talk about and share with you the look and feel that I was creating my Trandoshans in the various Star Wars games. I really wanted them to have a related look and feel. I was doing my own Trandoshan world-building in the paintings I was doing for FFG. Here is a selection of reference photos for this painting.

Trandoshan Mercenary - Reference
Photos by Achsa Nute

Now that I had reference, it was time to work up some thumbnails. One of the significant challenges with designing card art for FFG was the large amount of chrome the cards have. There were card elements that could potential be encroaching on nearly every side of the card, but we always somehow made it work. It sometimes left you with a painting with a lot of dead space on parts of the composition, but in the end, the card looked good. I knew I was cutting it close with these, but I always tried to push my compositions to see what I could get away with. Here are the thumbnails that I submitted.

Trandoshan Mercenary - Thumbnails
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Option 'B' was approved without changes, and I was given the go-ahead to move forward. I was rather surprised I didn't need to adjust anything, but excited that I could produce an image that better fit the surface I was working on. I got to work on the drawing and submitted it soon after the thumbnails were approved.

Trandoshan Mercenary
Star Wars LCG - Aggressive Negotiation
17 x 14 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Taylor Ingvarsson
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

The drawing was approved as well, and I was ready to start on the final painting. Wait, no, stop everything. At the last second, I was asked to shrink the entire image and add a lot of bleed to the top and sides. This came late in my process, and so the edits were made digitally to the drawing as I prepped it for the painting process. In the following animated process, you can see the two stages of the drawing and how much it needs to be reduced. This resulted in a lot more empty space on the sides and top, but as I mentioned before, it allowed all the chrome of the card to sit nicely over the image.

Trandoshan Mercenary - Process
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

I apologize for the darkness of some of the process shots. It was challenging to get good photos of my work as it is taking shape. The lighting is never perfect; the surface is often wet, which results in dark images with distracting glare. Hopefully, it gives you enough of an idea of how my paintings take shape.

My takeaway from this piece is to always paint as if it is your very last painting. Give the work your all. Commit yourself to the fullest and constantly push to do better. In the end, that painting very much may your last painting, and it better be a damn good one if there will be no more after it. 

Here again is the final painting for the Trandoshan Mercenary and the final card it appears on. Once it is cropped and placed with the chrome, it looks great, and this may be the best printed of my traditional pieces. At least, I think so. While the painting was made in 2016 and the work was released in 2017, now, in 2021, this marks an end of an era. I have no more Star Wars work, or FFG work in general, to share with you. Reprints of my work may surface at some point, but for now, we close the book on this period in my working career.

Trandoshan Mercenary
Star Wars LCG - Aggressive Negotiation
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Trandoshan Mercenary in handy dandy card form

That's all for another exciting Wednesday on the blog. See you back here on Friday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Friday, April 9, 2021

Stop Me if You Have Heard This Before - The Return of the Arcona Rumor Monger

Okay, so a funny thing happened since last Friday when I shared what had to be the final instance of my Arcona Rumor Monger painting being reused in a Star Wars game product. Well, since last week, it came to my attention that the art was used once again for the Convincing Demeanor card, but this time in the Diplomat Agitator Specialization Deck from 2015. It may have taken six years for me to learn this, but better late than never. At this point, I am assuming that this art is in every single Star Wars product released by FFG. That is a joke for the folks in the back. It is great that the art has been so well recieved that it found a use in so many products. It is the painting that keeps giving and giving. Here is a look at the much-repeated incarnation of the Arcona Rumor Monger art as the Convincing Demeanor card.

 
Convincing Demeanor
Diplomat Agitator Specialization Deck
© 2015 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

I wonder if I had known at the time of this pieces creation how often it would see print if I would have done anything differently. In all likelihood, I would have likely stressed over the piece and not enjoyed myself. That is the way of things.

If, for some reason, you are trying to complete your collection of my work in print, here is the cover of the Colonist Performer Specialization Deck so that you might purchase the correct one.

 
Diplomat Agitator Specialization Deck - For all your colonist performer needs

Lastly, here is the original illustration for the Arcona Rumor Monger. At this point, I am not sure that this will be the last time I will be sharing this one with you. Exactly how many times was this piece used?

 
Arcona Rumor Monger
Balance of the Force - Star Wars Card Game expansion
9.8 x 7.6 - Digital
© 2014 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

That is all for another exciting week on the blog. See you back here on Monday! Until then... 

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Friday, April 2, 2021

Colonist Performer Specialization Deck - The Return of the Arcona Rumor Monger... Wait, WUT?!? AGAIN????

If you think you have seen this post before, in some ways, you have, and in some ways, you haven't. My Arcona Rumor Monger painting that I created for the Star Wars LCG is above and beyond the most reused image that I have ever created. At least to my knowledge. It has been on cards, in books, in decks, and likely more than I will ever know. Every time I think I have found them all, another one will surface. The specialization decks for the Star Wars RPGs are where they seem to be more common. This particular usage is from 2015. I have known about it since 2019, but I haven't had a chance to share it here yet. Of all the images I have made in my two decades plus career that this is the image that keeps getting reprinted is a bit funny to me. It is nearly a direct self-portrait and is the first of my Star Wars work that points in the direction that all the subsequent work followed. Here is a look at the much-repeated incarnation of the Arcona Rumor Monger art as the Convincing Demeanor card.

Convincing Demeanor
Colonist Performer Specialization Deck
© 2015 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

If you look carefully, you can see the digital sketch of my giant map of The Grand Bazaar of Ethra VanDalia behind the card. You can also see my production checklist with all of the completed elements marked off in orange highlighter. The text is likely a section of my book that I was proofreading when I took these pictures of the card and the deck cover. A strange little slice of a moment in my life and the creation of my book is in the background of these images. 

If, for some reason, you are trying to complete your collection of my work in print, here is the cover of the Colonist Performer Specialization Deck so that you might purchase the correct one.

Colonist Performer Specialization Deck - For all your colonist performer needs

Lastly, here is the original illustration for the Arcona Rumor Monger. I need to make the time to tell you about all of the Easter eggs that I have put into this image and many of my other Star Wars paintings. That will need to wait for another day.

 
Arcona Rumor Monger
Balance of the Force - Star Wars Card Game expansion
9.8 x 7.6 - Digital
© 2014 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

That is all for another exciting week on the blog. See you back here on Monday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability, head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Fool Me Once - Imperial Assault - Process

Way back in 2017, there was an Ahsoka Tano Ally Pack released for Imperial Assault, and in it was one of my paintings, Fool Me Once. Fool Me Once was painted in 2015 for an Imperial Assault miniature expansion that was eventually canceled. Hard to believe that it has been five years since I painted this, and it took two years for the art to be used. As with most of the art I have done for FFG and Star Wars, it always gets used and often reused, used again, and then repurposed for good measure. When this project came my way, I was so excited. Not only was I finally getting to do the main art for an expansion, but I was also creating the packing art and designing a Star Wars miniature. One of the few things that I have never been able to achieve in my career as an artist has been to design a Star Wars action figure. I got close a couple of times, but it never worked out. With this assignment, I thought I had finally done it. In the end, it didn't happen, but I designed it, so that kind of counts. Maybe a little. This would have been a fantastic Outer Rim Smuggler, but at the end of the day, it became Fool Me Once. Here is how the final painting for Fool Me Once turned out.

Fool Me Once
Star Wars Imperial Assault - Ahsoka Tano Ally Pack
14 x 11 - Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Deb Freytag
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

As with nearly all of my paintings, I began the process with a photo shoot. I dressed up and posed for the Trandoshan guards and the Shistavanen (wolfman) smuggler hero. The painting needed to depict the hero sneaking through starport customs with illicit goods. In this case, it is the packaging for the Slave One X-Wing miniature that contained my Wookiee Gunner card. I also set up my Star Wars action figures in a little diorama to work out composition lighting. With all the reference collected, I began working on thumbnails. In the end, I submitted three options for this piece.

Fool Me Once -Thumbnails
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Looking back at these now, I am a little shocked that they went with option 'C.' Options 'A' and 'B,' to my eyes now, are way more dynamic and exciting. Five years on, I would have really liked to have painted option 'A,' that one is really cool with the slight dutch angle. Oh well, what is in the past is out of reach. They chose 'C,' and I painted 'C.' Now that I had an approved thumbnail, it was time to get started on the final drawing.

Fool Me Once - Drawing
Star Wars Imperial Assault - Ahsoka Tano Ally Pack
17 x 14 - Pencil on paper
Art Director - Deb Freytag
Original - SOLD
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

There were a couple of small edits that were requested with the drawing that I addressed on the paper and not digitally. You can see those edits in the animated process below. At the same time, i was working on the final drawing for the painting, I was working on the miniature design for the Outer Rim Smuggler. They did not require a full turnaround of the design, but they needed me to extend the figure past the borders of the painting. This was all simple enough, and it gave me a chance to do another drawing and finally design a Star Wars figure. We can now see how well that turned out. Here is the final miniature design for what would have been the Outer Rim Smuggler.

Outer  Rim Smuggler - Miniature design
Star Wars Imperial Assault
11 x 14 - Pencil on paper
Art Director - Deb Freytag
Original - SOLD
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

With all the pieces in place, it was time to work on the final painting. This time, I have included everything that went into the painting, from the thumbnail to the final painting, so that you can see how vital my thumbnails are to my process and the final painting. I work it all out from the beginning, and each additional step adds detail and refines the overall image.

Now is an excellent time to talk about graffiti in the final painting. This painting made it in just before Lucas Films put its foot down about artists writing things in the Star Wars written language of Aurebesh. Apparently, some artists were sneaking words into their paintings that were irrelevant to the work or the world-building. With all of my Aurebesh in my work, I have been world-building and adding a little something extra to the piece. You cannot read any of it at the size the art is printed. In the end, I was asked to blur the text out just a little and not to obliterate it since it only reads, "Yavin 4 was an inside job", "Down with the Empire," and "Hunt or be hunted." I will talk more on another day regarding all the Aurebesh in my Star Wars paintings and the story I was telling with assignments. A story that FFG and Lucas Film were never aware of.

All that said, here is the animated process of the painting coming together from the thumbnails to the completed painting.

Fool Me Once - Process steps
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Once the painting was finalized and approved, I needed to make the art that would have been used as the packing art for the Outer Rim Smuggler. With all of the miniature packaging, there is a painted figure of what the miniature looks like. This hero shot usually comes from the main art for the miniature pack, which is also the art that the mini is based on. Everything is consistent, and things can be reused. I digitally cut out the smuggler and did some digital cleanup of the art. To match the other sets, I smoothed out the painted texture because nearly all the packing art is digital and very smooth and polished. It was all a quick turnaround for the cleanup and did not take away from the original image. Here is what would have been the packing art for the Outer Rim Smuggler. 

Outer  Rim Smuggler - Packaging figure
Star Wars Imperial Assault
6 x 9.3 - Digital finish over Acrylic and pencil on board
Art Director - Deb Freytag
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

So much work for what ended up being a tiny little card in another miniature's expansion pack. This is the way of things, and so much happens long after the art is done and has little to nothing to do with all the work and time put into the assignment. Things changed, and at the end of the day, it was decided that this miniature set was not getting a release. Thankfully the art was used eventually. Here again, is the final art for Fool Me Once.

Fool Me Once
14 x 11 - Acrylic and pencil on board
© 2017 Lucasfilm, Ltd. TM Lucasfilm, Ltd. Under license to Fantasy Flight Games

Here is how the art was eventually used. Another heavy crop and tiny print size. Thankfully the art was reused for the Star Wars LCG expansion of Desperate Circumstances, where it was printed larger and more of it was used. It took a while, but most art saw the light of day. That is much more than I can say about some of my work. But that is a conversation for another day.

Fool Me Once in handy dandy card form

Clever Distraction in handy dandy card form
 
That's all for another exciting Wednesday on the blog. See you back here on Friday! Until then...

For more samples of my work or to contact me regarding my availability head over to my website: www.christopherburdett.com