March 2008

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Dirty Jobs portrait using the C.F. Payne technique

C.F. Payne, one of America’s best-known contemporary illustrators, bases his style on multi-layered technique that he invented. Known as the C.F. Payne multimedia technique, the process consists of creating a very detailed pencil drawing of the subject to be illustrated and then covering the drawing in several different layers:

  • Acrylic wash - used to give the subjects their lightest base color.
  • Watercolor wash - gives the subject their medium tones. Generally, a neutral brown-orange color is washed over the entire image and then lifted off of the the subject’s highlights.
  • Oil wash - gives the subject their shadow tones. A transparent mix of purple and green works great for this, especially in portraits. Again, the color can be washed over the entire image and then lifted off of the places where there should be no shadow.

Once the layers are in place, fix the entire image with some clayboard fixative (which leaves a good grain) and give the final coloring details with colored pencils.

I decided on trying to do a portrait of Mike Rowe, from the Discovery Channel’s Dirty Jobs, for my first C.F. Payne attempt because he has a very expressive face that I thought would be fun to work with. Overall I’m very pleased with how it turned out and I’d definitely try another portrait using this technique soon.

Twidget: View Twitter status on MySpace

UPDATE: My Twidget can no longer access Twitter feeds and I’m in the process of getting it to work again. Could it be that Twitter is blocking it somehow?


If you’re like me, you struggle with keeping a myriad of online services up-to-date with your latest photos, projects, and status information. I recently signed up for an account with Twitter, and I’ve been using this great service for updating my status on everything from my Facebook profile to this blog.

Sadly, MySpace doesn’t offer any way to integrate its status with Twitter, and I haven’t found any satisfactory way to do this with a third-party tool, so I decided to make my own. I’m calling my funky creation a Twidget, and you can see it in action on my MySpace profile.
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Tweets