
...38 Photoshop layers of humongous big.
(or 1.1GBs of data.)
I've never worked so many layers before, nor fiddled around with a piece as much as this one. I'm still not done fiddling with it (as you'll find out very soon). I focused on this so much that I didn't take any progress snapshots. Figuring out what had to be adjusted, what had to be erased, what had to be blurred, what had to be emphasized... filters, backgrounds, keeping a color-balance, finding good textures to blend in, layer order...
I don't know. It just put my mind into a zone. It was the most fun I've had in a while. And yes, I don't have a social life... not offline anyway.
This took over 20 hours to do, but I'm a complete noob to this painting style so there was a lot of staring and pondering and experimenting. I'm sure with more practice, I can get the effects I achieved here in a quarter of the time. I'm positive of that. Just as long as I don't do too much line art.... I like line art, though...
That explained, I won't be able to adequately retrace my steps and document what I did, but I'll mention something if it comes to me.

The Progress
And here we are... all the line art involved in the making of this image. It's made of multiple layers (some with a little shading), and laid out intermittently throughout the file to circumvent some of the filter layers, especially the final ones like the rain and the grungy-ness of the window.
To be honest, there's some charm to this. Perhaps it's his expression? Doesn't he look happier right now? This look doesn't translate in the final picture. He just looks sad, but... maybe that's just the ambiance of the final product? Or maybe it's Maybeline.
...Okay, sorry. Moving on. Let's add some shading next.
I believe this a combination of four layers, but they're all near the bottom of the stack. They all have varying opacity on them (thus why they're separate). Also, I have no clue why he has spots on his hoodie. They're also not visible in the final image, so I'm probably going to get rid of them.
(See? Already looking more depressed. Or homeless... I'm going with homeless.)
A little more build-up shading, and rudimentary hoodie shading. His hair already looks done. But... it obscures his eyebrows. This thick mane of hair obscuring facial features was dealt with later on.
That missing spot of gradient at the bottom left bugs me. I considered deleting the layer entirely (it doesn't add much), but sadly his breath is also on the gradient layer. I would've preferred it wasn't, but... Ah well. I'm going to fix it later.. probably with just a selection tool and some matte color eye-dropped from nearby.
Not much to comment about since it's just coloring. Almost flat. In fact, while I was doing it, I was mindlessly thinking of what to make for dinner, and I can't remember what dinner was either.
Priorities.
This is a combination of a couple of layers. It's the texture layer (mostly for his hoodie) and the beginning of the highlighting for the streetlamp light.
Hello city skyline, and streetlight with your silly glow on my character. You two made all the difference in this piece. Before this point, it didn't feel like the picture was working, you know? Thanks, both of you. Job well done. Here's a cookie.
In all seriousness, the streetlight's intensity helped bring his eyes out. It was much-needed, albeit unrealistic.
Now this is where the fun began. I got to play around with incorporating images into my piece. The first (of course) was the skyline, but I wanted it to be raining, too, so I searched around for raindrops on windows. I'll link to them if requested (there's a lot of images here already). Suffice to say, I tried to get high resolution images so that the detail wouldn't be compromised too much if I had to upscale at all.
You know what, though? It still didn't feel like he was looking through a window. Was it not enough rain? Was the window too clean? I gave it some thought, then sourced more images. Dirty windows! Old windows! Rain condensation! I had an arsenal in my hands, and then I filtered them into a semi-transparent submission.
I swear, half my time was spent just messing around with layer order, opacity, and filters. It wasn't all that bad. While I was just applying all the different effects in order, I found a cool "burned" filter set up which makes him look like a demon straight out of an Egyptian tomb.
Anyway, all that was left for this picture now was the text, the last city background (duplicated for a different filter), and the rainwater condensation on the window. That is my favorite part, by the way. I really like how I made his fingers look like he was pressing against wet glass, and the water displaced from that was dripping down the window.


https://www.deviantart.com/augitsu/gallery/?catpath=scraps
(along with the rest of my super-secret stash of Steemit picture uploads).
Have a question about this piece? Please let me know in the comments!
I'll try to be as descriptive as I can since I know I didn't explain very much or provide any tips/tricks for anyone to utilize in their own artwork. I honestly don't feel qualified to do a tutorial post on digital painting. Not yet, anyway. I mean... I just started doing this myself. I don't have the caliber yet. The stamina. The fortitude. Why did writing that make me feel hungry?Anyway, that's it for me. I have to go fall face first into a pillow now.
See you all later!

Thanks for all the fish!