For a first stippling project, I think it came out pretty well. As a school assignment however, I managed a C grade, only because I didn't finish it in time. I had the face done, the most important part, but the neck part wasn't finished so my teacher had to give me a crappy grade because it was "incomplete". I don't blame her and I know she didn't want to give me such a low grade, but it wasn't done. It was almost the last project of the year so I had plenty of time to finish it over that summer and, as you can tell, I did.
When I was in college, I took an illustration class and pen and ink came up again. I did another project that used stippling and some other pen and ink techniques as well. This assignment was was to take something "organic" or natural and pair it with something man made. I wanted to use dragons again, so I did this:
I'm sorry I don't have a better picture of this, I took this photo while it was in it's frame, trying to avoid reflections from the glass. I don't have it with me now to take it out and get a better photo, unfortunately. For this, I found the picture of the castle in a book of mine and the dragon is from a pair of candlesticks. That dragon is wrapped around a candle stick so I just made him wrap himself around a tower instead. The dragon is all stippling but the castle is a mix of techniques, from hatching to just plain scribbling. I had a lot of fun with this one.
After this semester was over, I decided I wanted to do more stippling projects over the summer and I decided to do some of the Titanic. I've always been fascinated with the history of Titanic and had done some projects with it in the past. Now I wanted to do something big and do it in stippling. I actually had a series in mind of Titanic in stippling, from a picture of it being built, a picture of it sailing, a picture of it sinking and a picture of it as it looks today, rusting away under the sea. I only managed that last one, because it took me the entire summer and I was a little burnt out afterwards! But I'm very happy with it:
I forget the exact size of this, but it's cut down slightly from a 16x20" sheet of paper. I used a 005 Micron pen for the ship (ridiculously fine point) and for the black background, a 01 Micron (only slightly less ridiculously fine point). The background was very tedious, because it's just plain black. The ship itself was a lot of fun to do. I've wanted to enter this into contests, but I'm always worried about copyrights. I did this from a picture from National Geographic, so it's not original. But again, no one can get an original photo of the Titanic, because of where it is. I don't know if I could sell prints of it, either.
Well I hope you enjoyed my pen and ink work. More work to come soon!