Sven – Heavy Knight with Sword coloring page
Sven heavy knight with sword Dota colouring page with huge armour, strong pose, and bold line art will be a perfect choice among the fans of epic fantasy colouring.
This page depicting a Sven heavy knight holding his sword in a colouring displays how mighty, honourable, and dominating in battlefield this one out of the melee heroes is. Half-body pose is depicted fullly carrying his huge sword prepared to fight, illustrating brute strength, control, and fight determination as a knight. The painting emphasises his body armour, wide figure and weapon which are large and are executable with clean, high-contrasted black and white line art that can be coloured. The individual areas like armour plates, shoulder armour, gauntlets, belt pieces, boots and the blown-up sword are highly defined, resulting in the detail of shading where the colourists can control and shade appropriately. His stance suggests the stability and inexorable strength, not speed, and this pattern further makes Sven a warrior created to fight in the front line and be victorious. On the one hand, this page is appropriate in both traditional and digital colouring, and it is a bright and engulfing fantasy colouring experience not only among the Dota players but also those oriented to the character-art.
How to Color This Page
Colouring Sven (and turned into a heavy knight with a sword) use a strong contrast, weight and metallic depth as elements to reflect the fact that he is a strong armoured warrior. The skin should start with warm natural flesh, especially. Use heavier application on the face, neck, hands and joints to determine shape and his warrior-toughened look. Cover the gaps to be soft but hard to retain a rough appearance.
The armour that is worn by Sven must be huge and tough. Base colours are to be used with steel greys, dark silvers, or light blue-greys. Darken the shadows under interlacing pieces of armour, and in the joints and under the shoulder armour, to give the impression of weight. Add lighter highlights in the edges, corners and slightly raised surfaces so as to imply polished metallic objects reflecting the light. This contrast is necessary to make the armour to look heavy and dimensional.
One must have a very sharp focal point which is the sword. Apply darker tones of steel towards the bottom and fade to lighter ones as one goes towards the edge of this blade to create an impression of sharpness and power. Minor scratches or irregular lines and dark could be used to add realism and war-torn denim. The hilt and grip are designed either in dark brown or controllable metals in leather or black.
As a complement to the armor, the cloth elements, straps, and belts can be stained in deep reds, dark blues or rich browns without overwhelming the armor. There are reinforce shadows at the points of overlapping of materials to remain clear. When working in digital colouring, it is possible to control shadows and highlights separately in layers, which enable accurate control. Traditional colouring Traditional colouring with coloured pencils works best to mix metallic gradients, whereas markers are limited to a few bright areas of armour. The ultimate outcome must convey power and stability, and absolute knightly strength with the use of bold shading and solid color decisions.