adventures

of aplantfancier

Category: other worlds

  • two

    Here’s another from the series of six No Man’s Sky travel journal paintings that I’ve been sharing the past few weeks, and here are one and six if you missed them.

    I was intimidated by the geometric, egg-shaped mineral formations on this planet, so naturally I made them the focus. I love how the volcano turned out, and the little brush pen trees, and even the mountains in the distance are fine.

    I’m working on painting this drawing of L. Sternketeus today, and so should have that for you tomorrow if I can stop overthinking it.

    Okay, thanks for looking!

    Until next time.

  • l. sternketeus

    This week, we head back to the vermillion globe to take a look at L. Sternketeus — robot fauna with a handy built-in umbrella. Nice way to see the misty pink and seafoam coast of Jasmodus Gamma.

    From there it’s back to Piporo to build a gate and then–

    Well, you’ll just have to wait and see.

  • one

    I wanted to return to this series of paintings I teased last month, from my No Man’s Sky travel journal. This, as you can probably tell from the title, is the first.

    One of the most “Earth-like” planets I’ve ever run across, except that there seems to have been some sort of technology-related apocalypse at some point. Oh wait, that’s exactly like Earth!

    I love how this one turned out, I love the volcano violet sky and the brush pen shadows. I decided to paint the whole system before I moved on, and each planet came with new challenges, and new opportunities to learn.

    I’m still learning.

    Back tomorrow, with something even closer to home.

    See you then.

  • ussendo iosai

    It’s lemonade skies and fall colors for miles on the humid planet Ussendo Iosai. The sea is a murky green at night, streaked with navy blue shadows, but in the daytime it’s pale yellow, like a mirror turned at the sky.

    I spent some time in the curly grass hills photographing charismatic robot fauna before I set out for the paradise moon Piporo 34/L1, intending to build a base. Been a while since I put any roots down, but I like it here. Pastel coastlines and cotton candy skies and flowering meadows abound. And Piporo is the jewel, though it leaves me wanting oceans.

    I am anxious to build a gate and warp on, to see what circles the next star, but-

    Oh! I miscounted the planets! So there’s one final stop. “Stellar corruption detected,” scans say. Huh.

    Let’s go check it out.

  • f. wailfitus

    I wasn’t long on the mechanical planet Tayne.

    I packed up my mining equipment and my 1000 gold and left no trace — except for the handful of gravitino balls I stole. Left the rocky landscape, strewn with little konpeito machines, and set out for . . .

    Humid Planet! Ah! Last planet in the system. And it’s robot fauna and curly grass again!

    I landed at night and in the dark the grass is purple black, the flowers and ferns a juicy red. Beyond the crest of this hill lies the sea, and behind me the forest.

    Can’t wait to watch the sun come up.

    See you next week.

  • silver lining

    Checked out the mechanical planet Tayne while I finished up painting this curly grass hillside from Piporo 34/L1. I’m never 100% happy with the curly grass, but I’m a little closer every time, so I guess that’s the silver lining.

    Speaking of silver, the metallic paint is soooo pretty in person but doesn’t scan well. Kind of a bummer. In the right lighting, you can see the glint of the sun.

    On Tayne:

    One creature, a ball of lightning, B. Granteuiamosa. “Encountered amidst the endless confusion of planet Tayne,” writes the algorithm. lol

    Scans warn of malicious sentinels. In red instead of black, so you know it’s serious.

    Not much to look at, although the sky is pretty; pale bubblegum pink with near translucent blue and silver rings arcing overhead like a rainbow.

    And there are gold deposits, so I set up my four autonomous mining units and plunked down a save beacon so I don’t lose them — there’s a mistake you don’t make twice.

    I was about to say I’m surprised the sentinels haven’t found me yet, but here they are, right on schedule.

    Better run.

    See you next time.

  • still piporo

    I really like this planet, or moon rather. I keep going to leave, but then I get sucked back into taking pictures again.

    In some places the curly grass shifts mauve to blue. I took one where Triangle Head is just a gold shape in the prairie, like an idol.

    But they’ll have to wait because I have launched back into space, a lime green glow, magenta gas clouds, and after a scan I’m on my way.

    Mechanical Planet, aggressive sentinels.

    Sure, I’ll bite.

    See you tomorrow, in color.

  • b. falseridea

    Another corn-type plant of Piporo 34/L1. Notes: irresistible seeds

    Still roaming the paradise moon, and sure enough, got caught up in a localized gravity inversion while drawing these lovely plants, with big purple-black leaves like a canna. I was lifted into the sky, alarmed, in an updraft of boulders, but then just hung suspended and enjoyed the view.

  • piporo

    In no hurry to leave Piporo 34/L1, paradise moon. Golden sunlight streams down from the sky, pooling in valleys, and everywhere flowers.

    Gone by butterfly in search of my next painting. I haven’t yet had my fill of curly violet grass, or the flowering prairie. The cool blue shade of a boulder. The rolling hills that go on forever.

  • paradise moon

    Had a quick look around the paradise moon of Jasmodus Gamma and I might stay a while and paint the curly, very berry grassland, all shades of fuchsia and blackberry and violet — just my style.

    There’s cerulean tallgrass cascading down hillsides, and two different plants of what I like to think of as the “corn type,” and the shimmering gold of Jasmodus Gamma filling the sky.

    Scan warns of deadly pressure variations but so far it’s paradise.

    I’ll take a long walk and let you know.