|
|
I have zero idea how to price this or what tier this belongs in. I've sold some for 500k and some for only 40k so I'm genuinely confused as well as wondering if its worth continueing. ~ ~ I'm also open to feedback on quality and places to improve. However please don't mention hair or grounding unless you have helpful tips because I already know I struggle with those and I'm working on them.
|
| |
|
|
|
I would personally say mid-upper T3. There's quite a few "foundations" that I can see missing in your piece, such as shadow & highlight work done on the horse to create dimension, tweaking the tones of your stocks to match together and feel as one piece, shadows, and as you said, grounding and hair. My art tutorial doesn't specifically touch on grounding, but I do go over my hair process. You might find it helpful. :) Pricing really comes down to what people will pay, more than anything else. Everyone's tastes in art style are slightly different with what they desire. Try out a price, if your pieces are selling and your shop is consistently full, then that is likely a good price or you may want to bump up a little bit. If none are selling, then that's a sign to lower your price. It's a lot of trial and error to get that sweet spot, and then maintaining it by gradually increasing the better your art gets.
|
| |
|
|
|
WildWillow said:
Thank you. I think I've been over-adjusting the tones of my stock which is why it looks off. Some it's too much(like my beach piece) and some its not enough because I'm trying not to overdo it(like my skull one). Same with my smudging/ highlights and shadows. I just can't seem to find that happy medium for some reason. I think I found a good way to do hair, it just needs practice. Lots of it. Maybe some smaller brushes too.
|
| |
|