mitch
~ Elite 1000 Member ~
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2007
- Messages
- 2,648
Hi Matthew-
I've been following this thread and the only suggestion I'd make is either keep all the leaves inside the scroll or have one or two more spill over into the next. You've got just one leaf doing that in/over the first scroll (ok, kinda two if you count the leaf structure where the scroll originates), but none on the next two scrolls. It's a defining detail to my eye, a stylistic flair that either needs emphasized or not used at all. Personally, I like it and would employ it consistently on all three scrolls. On the third scroll, it would make a neat way to fill in that corner.
Upon closer inspection, a couple more would also include more folds or 'puckers' where the leaf is 'pleated' in the middle. Those are always a nice detail, add a bit of complexity and depth, but you've only got a couple in your first two large leaves and none in the rest of the composition.
my $0.02
I've been following this thread and the only suggestion I'd make is either keep all the leaves inside the scroll or have one or two more spill over into the next. You've got just one leaf doing that in/over the first scroll (ok, kinda two if you count the leaf structure where the scroll originates), but none on the next two scrolls. It's a defining detail to my eye, a stylistic flair that either needs emphasized or not used at all. Personally, I like it and would employ it consistently on all three scrolls. On the third scroll, it would make a neat way to fill in that corner.
Upon closer inspection, a couple more would also include more folds or 'puckers' where the leaf is 'pleated' in the middle. Those are always a nice detail, add a bit of complexity and depth, but you've only got a couple in your first two large leaves and none in the rest of the composition.
my $0.02