Here's the breakdown of the process, from the initial light pencil sketch, a basic contour (done with a dip pen + India ink), then a couple hours of rendering volume with value through gradations of texture for tone (playing with a new set of Microns for the hatching). I also experimented with using a varnish on the finished piece, after prepping it with regular fixative. This added some luxurious depth + luster, and restored the blacks which got dulled after smothering under the watercolor. PS: This was a tip I always meant to follow up on from Sandy, and so this is dedicated to him.
And then, at the end, I did what I so often do in life; what has marked my artistic deviation from drawing normal illustrations and consequently securing my fate as a cartoonist: I had to go and goof it all up by adding some smartass commentary. This was in part inspired by the lame joke "What did the father buffalo say to his kid on the first day of school? Bye son." And yeah, there wouldn't be any grass around the winter solstice up in our neck of the woods, but that's okay because buffalo also don't think in English, I think. Update: I eventually edited the JPEG caption to say "summer" solstice instead, but then again, there wouldn't be any snowflakes in June, but so what (see above). Then the "Nuggets" header was affixed and the image got used as an unexpectedly classy crafted cartoon - probably a few subscribers that are unaware of the different styles I can draw in.
They had slightly redesigned the facility since last year/last time I visited, having taken out the big fish tank in the visitor lobby, and most notably, adding a Plains buffalo mount to the diorama. It brought to mind the recent efforts to reintroduce the native Wood bison to Alaska (albeit in a region that there isn't any record of them being present, according to the overlooked opinion of the affected Native groups). Last summer on another field trip my class got to go behind the scenes at the Large Animal Research Station and we got a bonus sight of the transplanted herd being held temporarily in their pastures. Quite a sight seeing them charge around, with "little" babies gamboling about.
While technically there are largely cosmetic differences between the two subspecies, it's akin to the aesthetic variation between most big, hairy mammals of the north. Which I got permission to quickly grab a couple snapshots of their hooves (hidden from view so I had to jump the ropes), and the moment was captured in turn by a student. As a result I think I now know exactly I want my body to be used for when donated to science, but preferably housed in a closet in the art department, right next to our classroom skeleton.
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