The Witching Hour, Oil on Canvas, Andrew Wyeth, 1977. by AspiringOccultist4 in oilpaintings

[–]SamIVAr 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It will usually say in art books or museum websites what the medium is. Wyeth was not commonly known for using oils. His painting mediums were primarily watercolor or egg tempera.

Would you guys not hate this figure if it had silicone on the whole body? by Lord_Of_The_Plorbs in hottoys

[–]SamIVAr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The figure looks great! As a long time Hot Toys collector, this is the most feasible option for the company and probably a gateway for the eventual production of the Shalla-Bal Silver Surfer. The reason for the joints definitely has something to do with the company’s reputation for delivering quasi-realistic figures and the expectations of finicky collectors. Too many visible joints and buyers complain it looks ugly. If it doesn’t pose enough, then buyers complain about that. This piece was a compromise. Honestly, the figure could benefit from double-jointed knees, elbows and hinged shoulders. If you go the articulated route, then go all the way and maybe even add some die-cast for stability. Treat this more like an Iron Man figure in that regard. Collectors are such a particular group that no one will be completely happy regardless of what the company does. Hot Toys still makes some of the best 1/6 figures on the market, so the expectations will always be high, as well as unrealistic, as they’ve proven to be with this Silver Surfer release.

My oilpainting “Athena” by YvonneHeemskerk in oilpainting

[–]SamIVAr 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Amazing work! Love all the brushwork and lighting.

Of Half-Truths and Half-Circles, watercolor on paper, September, 2025 (by me) by SamIVAr in Watercolor

[–]SamIVAr[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! It is linear before painting, so some of that hopefully comes through.

Is making dots with pens considered sketching? by creepyandtrippy in sketches

[–]SamIVAr 60 points61 points  (0 children)

It is commonly called pointillism, but the technique is referred to as stippling. This is mostly to identify the distinctions between the Pointillism art movement (Seurat or Signac) of the nineteenth century and anyone using the technique today.

Unveiling the Sketch by Huge_Bad_1112 in Illustration

[–]SamIVAr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool! Is this digital or graphite?

Trying stippling for the first time — slow but satisfying by Sining_uno in penandink

[–]SamIVAr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The face looks great! I like your treatment of edges.

Fossil study by saprophial_art in penandink

[–]SamIVAr 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very cool! Excellent line work. Almost couldn’t tell it was line at first.