Here, we explained the steps very simple and easy to create Superman cartoon.
STEP 1. Source Material
Find yourself a radioactive spider and had bitten someone, preferably a nerd orphans. If you work in a nuclear winter, this should be easy to accomplish, but if not then to find a spider and go regularly to the dentist. Just before they take the X-ray image of your teeth, pop the spider in your mouth. Presto, instant radioactive spider! When your dentist asks you why X-rays came back showing a spider in your mouth, tell the dentist of your mouth is haunted! BooOOOooo!
Now that you have your own radioactive Spider-Man, we can proceed to the most important:
STEP 2. Super Hero Proportions
What makes a superhero is really great physique. A guy like Spidey has to be the size of its seven heads high, and three of his heads wide.
If it is not clear to you, just this image in your mind: Take Toby Maguire and place it next to the 3D CGI Spider-Man, which flips around in the movies. They are not the same size are they? Now imagine cutting off the head of Toby, and stack a bunch of six heads with Toby on top, may be secured by a pike or a skewer. Do you imagine that? Wow, you're one sick puppy.
Back to the drawing: ask your human Radioactive / Spider hybrid of a flat, clean surface, attaching metal handcuffs on his arm and legs. Moisten your subject with a soft balm, such as linseed oil or wax Internet. Use a ratchet pulley or stretch this pseudo-Spidey times larger and wider.
It is best to do this in a pit or a dark dungeon, as the cries can become a debilitating progress. After a few months, you should have a Spider-Man in precise proportions ready to serve as a model of your artist!
STEP 3. Penciling
Use a pencil to pick the lock at the Sloan Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and sneak into the basement. Knock out a guard and take his finger over a lighter. Take a warm feeling his mark in the waning of the end of the pencil and use it to gain entry to the laboratory of electrochemical energy, where they are currently building a prototype for work shrink-ray!
Use the radius to shrink your model about 5 inches tall. We're almost done, ready for ink?!
STEP 4. Inking
Buy or steal a bottle of blue ink and a bottle of red. I prefer Daler-Rowney FW Inks, many professionals use Windsor Newton. "Stuck up SNOTS. Dip your wrinkled, stretched and irradiated Spider-Dude halfway in blue ink and then halfway into the red.
Ask him in exciting action poses and then press firmly but not too hard against a piece of paper.
STEP 5. Finish
Voila! Throw a handful of random black lines on top of these impressions of ink and you're a regular old Todd McFarlane! Encourage your model to change channels in his arms to save you time drawing strap. Repeat this process with Vultures, octopus and Goblins to give your Spidey villains to fight. Draw some wavy lines around the head to indicate his Spidey Spidey-Senses are tingling, or have a hangover, or perhaps annoyed that Lucy pulled the football away just as he was kicking. .. * Sigh * ... again
STEP 1. Source Material
Find yourself a radioactive spider and had bitten someone, preferably a nerd orphans. If you work in a nuclear winter, this should be easy to accomplish, but if not then to find a spider and go regularly to the dentist. Just before they take the X-ray image of your teeth, pop the spider in your mouth. Presto, instant radioactive spider! When your dentist asks you why X-rays came back showing a spider in your mouth, tell the dentist of your mouth is haunted! BooOOOooo!
Now that you have your own radioactive Spider-Man, we can proceed to the most important:
STEP 2. Super Hero Proportions
What makes a superhero is really great physique. A guy like Spidey has to be the size of its seven heads high, and three of his heads wide.
If it is not clear to you, just this image in your mind: Take Toby Maguire and place it next to the 3D CGI Spider-Man, which flips around in the movies. They are not the same size are they? Now imagine cutting off the head of Toby, and stack a bunch of six heads with Toby on top, may be secured by a pike or a skewer. Do you imagine that? Wow, you're one sick puppy.
Back to the drawing: ask your human Radioactive / Spider hybrid of a flat, clean surface, attaching metal handcuffs on his arm and legs. Moisten your subject with a soft balm, such as linseed oil or wax Internet. Use a ratchet pulley or stretch this pseudo-Spidey times larger and wider.
It is best to do this in a pit or a dark dungeon, as the cries can become a debilitating progress. After a few months, you should have a Spider-Man in precise proportions ready to serve as a model of your artist!
STEP 3. Penciling
Use a pencil to pick the lock at the Sloan Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and sneak into the basement. Knock out a guard and take his finger over a lighter. Take a warm feeling his mark in the waning of the end of the pencil and use it to gain entry to the laboratory of electrochemical energy, where they are currently building a prototype for work shrink-ray!
Use the radius to shrink your model about 5 inches tall. We're almost done, ready for ink?!
STEP 4. Inking
Buy or steal a bottle of blue ink and a bottle of red. I prefer Daler-Rowney FW Inks, many professionals use Windsor Newton. "Stuck up SNOTS. Dip your wrinkled, stretched and irradiated Spider-Dude halfway in blue ink and then halfway into the red.
Ask him in exciting action poses and then press firmly but not too hard against a piece of paper.
STEP 5. Finish
Voila! Throw a handful of random black lines on top of these impressions of ink and you're a regular old Todd McFarlane! Encourage your model to change channels in his arms to save you time drawing strap. Repeat this process with Vultures, octopus and Goblins to give your Spidey villains to fight. Draw some wavy lines around the head to indicate his Spidey Spidey-Senses are tingling, or have a hangover, or perhaps annoyed that Lucy pulled the football away just as he was kicking. .. * Sigh * ... again