A nice fellow I know from the internets is selling 4 original BGs/keys from Tartakovsky's Clone Wars series on ebay. All these were painted in-house by Scott Wills or his crew. http://www.ebay.com/sch/
March 09, 2012
Clone Wars BGs/Key paintings
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
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Friday, March 09, 2012
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Labels: Background painting, Clone Wars, Genndy Tartakovsky, Scott Wills
October 13, 2010
Samurai Jack Painting Demos
For those of you who have requested videos of my painting process, here's something better!
Scott Wills demonstrating his technique for the painters at Rough Draft in Korea. These are loaded with great tips. Scott makes it all look very easy.
P.S. I've been told that BG painters would have at least 2 airbrushes, one for water and one for paint.
P.P.S. The badger blending brush that Scott is using is one that Grumbacher used to make, but was discontinued a few years ago.
P.P.P.S. Scott made the bridge he is using from a couple pieces of wood, some double-sided tape and a metal ruler. The advantage is that it doesn't bend like the acrylic bridges you can buy and it's also lower, making it more comfortable to use.
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
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Labels: Background painting, demos, Samurai Jack, Scott Wills
September 30, 2010
Scott Wills Blog
Rejoice!
The Jedi Master himself is now blogging. You might want to have a drool rag and a change of underwear handy.
http://animationbgs.blogspot.com
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Thursday, September 30, 2010
8
comments
Labels: Backgrounds, Scott Wills
July 16, 2010
Kevin Dart and Scott Wills Titan BGs
For those of you anxiously awaiting Genndy Tartakovsky's upcoming cartoon Sym-bionic Titan, hustle on over to Kevin Dart's blog where he's posted some of the superb background paintings for the show. They're taking TV to another level.
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Friday, July 16, 2010
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Labels: Background painting, Genndy Tartakovsky, Kevin Dart, Scott Wills, Sym-bionic Titan
September 10, 2009
Ren & Stimpy BG Caps for John
Here are some DVD screencaps from Ren & Stimpy. The handy work of Bill Wray, Scott Wills and others.
Copyright Spumco and Nickelodeon.
EDIT:
Color corrected and added a few more.











Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Thursday, September 10, 2009
10
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Labels: Backgrounds, Bill Wray, John K, Ren and Stimpy, Scott Wills
March 31, 2009
Latest from Scott Wills
For those of you who have been wondering what Scott's been up to lately, wonder no more!
Besides wrapping up art direction on Monsters vs Aliens, Scott teamed up with Genndy recently to produce a short for CN called 'Maruined'. Scott painted all the final backgrounds himself over an incredibly short span of time... around 50 in about 2 months (on top of his full-time job)! It's uncertain if Maruined will ever air on TV, but Scott sent over a few of his BGs and as you can see, they are absolutely spectacular. Looking at them again, I'm still having difficulty comprehending the brilliant artistry. To say the least, they are like nothing I've seen before. How often can that be said these days?
Before you ask, they were painted mostly by hand (except for the characters and a few digital elements for animation purposes, I believe). Images are Copyright © Cartoon Network.



Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
14
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Labels: Backgrounds, Genndy Tartakovsky, Maruined, Scott Wills
October 06, 2008
More from Scott Wills
Since I'm under the weather and finding it hard to draw and keep my nose from running... here are some phenomenal paintings Scott Wills recently sent over.
This first batch is from Star Wars Clone Wars Vol. 1. No, not the new CG feature, but the 2D animated series for CN. Available for purchase on DVD. If you haven't seen it... you're missing out. Genndy and his dream team pulled out all the stops. Copyright Cartoon Networks and LucasFilm Ltd.
The detail, color, design and lighting in these backgrounds is truly amazing.



Scott was nice enough to send over this Samurai Jack background that he painted. This is a better version than the one I posted before. Apparently the overseas painters felt the need to repaint this final background, even though Scott sent them a better, finished one. Copyright Cartoon Network.
Scott also confirmed that yes indeed, he painted the original "Reflections" piece, that was turned into a giclee print and is available at various animation art dealers. Absolutely gorgeous.
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Monday, October 06, 2008
18
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Labels: Backgrounds, Clone Wars, Samurai Jack, Scott Wills
August 12, 2008
More from Scott Wills
I was curious to know more about the working methods on Samurai Jack and how the overseas painters matched the stateside paint colors, so I asked Scott whether they emailed scans of the comps, keys and backgrounds to Korea, or if they sent over the actual paintings. He was nice enough to reply and drop even more knowledge about the process.
Drake,
"...on Sam Jack when you sent the keys to Rough Draft, were you sending the real keys, or scans of them?"
We sent the original paintings and scans. I scanned all the keys myself and color corrected them so they were accurate. At the time I think most shows just made color Xeroxes of everything and then shipped the originals overseas.
Once the keys are scanned they are ready for the "Color Models" to be created. All of the character designs, props and effects (anything that will animate) are scanned into the computer and color-filled by the "Color Stylist". The color stylist can't really start until they have the scanned background to judge their work over.
Before Samurai Jack all shows had outlines on their animation and some shows like Dexter's Lab had very thick line work. The outlines are very helpful in keeping everything "reading" over the background, remove them and you've got problems. The thicker the line the more fool proof the read.
On Samurai Jack our characters had no outline whatsoever so it was critical for me to make sure that the original color relationship between the "color keys"and the "color models" would not drift apart. Now here is what I imagined could happen overseas - the overseas painter paints a final background trying to match the color key but the colors are a bit off. Then they scan their final background which will throw the color off even more.
To get back on track there needed to be a color correction step that matched the final bg scan to my scan of the color key. I actually saw this being done when I visited Korea during the second season of SJ. It was incredible, the final scan was so far off that the people doing the correction were individually selecting every color and forcing it to match the key. They were working so fast I couldn't believe my eyes!
Attached is an example of a color model over a bg key from the "Jump Good" episode.
-Scott
Here's the lovely example he sent over:

If any of you want more insider info about Samurai Jack, the round table discussion with Genndy, Scott and some of the other super talented folks on the Season 4 DVD is great. You should own it.
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
3
comments
Labels: Backgrounds, Samurai Jack, Scott Wills
August 02, 2008
Message from Scott Wills
Scott Wills contacted me recently and was kind enough to set me straight on the artwork I purchased and the process behind doing backgrounds on Samurai Jack. As much as I wanted to keep this stuff to myself, I thought somebody else might be able to benefit from this info too. Especially considering the time and effort put into this detail breakdown.
Scott wrote:
Hi Drake,
The paintings that you bought are "production backgrounds" painted at Rough Draft in Korea. They were not painted by me or any of the other artists that worked on the color keys for Samurai Jack.
Let me explain the basic "color key" process on Samurai.
PICKING THE COLOR KEYS
I go over the storyboard and background drawings (layouts) with Genndy and pick which shots will need a color key. We discuss the mood and any color ideas (if any) that Genndy had in mind. On average we would do about 30 keys per 22 minute episode (some episodes got over 50).
PAINTING THE COLOR KEYS
A full sized (12 field) production background is about 11 X 13 inches. The color keys are painted much smaller, about 4.5 X 6 inches. The idea is to do small quick paintings that will later be painted full size, tighter and with more detail overseas. Often we would pick too many keys to paint in the time allotted so we would have to paint even smaller rougher keys we called "comps" (about 2 X 4 inches). In addition we would also paint a few full sized "Finals" to demonstrate the final technique.
Many episodes would also require special "how to" instructions to demonstrate a certain technique or theory.
The keys are not intended to be used as the final production BG that you would see on screen.
MATCH TO LIST
Since not every shot gets a color key a "match to" list is created to explain which key to use as reference for what shot.
Example:
Shot 1 - Key 1
Shot 2 - match key 1
Shot 3 - match key 1
Shot 4 - match key 1
Shot 5 - Key 5
Shot 6 - match key 5
and so on.
For "The Woolies" (episode 4) Jenny and I painted 41 keys, 7 comps and 4 finals in about 3 weeks. Jenny actually painted the "comp" for the BG you bought, not the "final".
Unfortunately by the time we produced Samurai Jack most of the good BG painters that had worked on Ren & Stimpy at Rough Draft Korea were gone. Many shows were being painted digitally with sterile and cold results. It was very difficult to get much quality at all. Often when we got the "work print" back from Korea I would be shocked to see the scanned keys and even comps on screen! They didn't even bother to paint many of the final backgrounds. But incredibly they would repaint some of the finals we sent them! You wanted to tear your hair out, that's TV animation for you.
There you have it! This definitely cleared up a few things for me, and was so great to hear directly from the source. Very cool of Scott to put such a detailed message together. And the icing on the cake? He sent some gorgeous examples of his work (plus one of Jenny's)!
Enjoy!

Final
Comp
Detail
Comp
Instruction noteSo cool, not only to see the stunning finals and comps, but also to see the "how to" note!
Thanks very much Scott! Made my week!
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Saturday, August 02, 2008
8
comments
Labels: Backgrounds, color keys, Jenny Gase-Baker, Samurai Jack, Scott Wills
July 20, 2008
Acquisitions
I have recently acquired these beauties from Samurai Jack. The internet can be a magical place sometimes...
From Jack and the Hunters.
From Jack and the Woolies.
The precision with which these were painted is stunning. They are definitely hand done, but with an almost machine-like accuracy and control. Amazing to see in person! Btw, if anyone knows whether it was Scott Wills or Jenny Gase-Baker that did them, I'd love to know!
EDIT: The top was likely done overseas and the bottom one was done by Jenny herself! Thanks to Chris and Jenny for confirming!
EDIT EDIT: See post above for Scott's clarification.
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Sunday, July 20, 2008
7
comments
Labels: Backgrounds, Jenny Gase-Baker, Samurai Jack, Scott Wills
July 14, 2008
Milt Gross + Hanna Barbera BG Study
Here's my attempt at a Milt Gross drawing mixed with Hanna Barbera style painting from the 50's, ala Bob Gentle and Art Lozzi. This is a little exercise John K posted awhile back that I wanted to try. There are a few sloppy areas and the colors look better in person. I have another color version I'll post soon.
My attempt at combining the styles. 4.5" x 10" cel vinyl acrylic on Bristol paper. Scan.
Photo.
The original Milt Gross illustration.
Sample of HB background art.
Also, go check out John's latest post about Scott Wills, where he uses many of the DVD screencaps I put together. Thanks for the mention, John!
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Monday, July 14, 2008
6
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Labels: Art Lozzi, Backgrounds, Hanna Barbera, Milt Gross, painting, Study
May 17, 2008
Zappo Change-O!
What do you get when you combine Genndy Tartakovsky and Scott Wills on a Dexter's Laboratory Golden Book? You get one helluva Golden Book, that's what.
Below are some choice scans from Dexter's Laboratory: Zappo Change-O! I found it online, and what a find it is! This book is full of really fun drawings and gorgeous paintings... just another excuse to love Genndy and Scott Wills (if you need one). Track a copy of it down, you won't be sorry!
Copyright CN, Genndy Tartakovsky, Scott Wills, and Golden Books.








Any other Scott Wills Golden Books out there? Please let me know!
Posted by
Drake Brodahl (pumml)
at
Saturday, May 17, 2008
6
comments
Labels: Dexter, Genndy Tartakovsky, Golden Book, Scott Wills





