Preview

Make a Fairy-Tale Inspired Magical Hand Shaped Vine

Jul 14th in Illustration by Jonathan

In this tutorial, we'll show the intermediate to advanced Adobe Illustrator artist how to make a fairy-tale inspired magical vine that is shaped like a hand. You should have a basic understanding of Adobe Illustrator tools before you begin this tutorial.

Author: Jonathan

Jonathan is a graphic designer with extensive hands-on knowledge of Adobe Suite Products. He has several years of experience using Adobe Illustrator, specifically, and seeks to share his skills with the design community.

Final Image Preview

To begin with let's have a look at the image we'll be creating.

Step 1

Take a photo of your hand or have someone else pose for you. The more interesting the hand position, the more interesting your final artwork will be. Make sure you take the photo at a high enough resolution. This way it's easy to see where the details of the hand are.

Step 2

Once you have the photo placed inside Adobe Illustrator, you can put it on its own layer. Then turn the visibility of that layer off. Using the Ellipse Tool (L), draw a condensed ellipse. Select a nice rich brown color for the fill.

Step 3

Select the Gradient Mesh Tool (U), pick a second slightly lighter brown color, and make one or two points inside the ellipse. This will give the vine some depth (notice how the edges on the vine are darker.) Also, make a copy of the vine, and keep it off to the side of your artboard.

Step 4

Turn the layer that has the image of your hand on. Place the vine on an angle, and make sure it doesn't exceed the length of the hand and arm. In the next step, we'll use the Warp Tool (Shift+R), and it has a tendency to elongate any shape you manipulate with it.

Step 5

Select the Warp Tool(Shift+R), and match the contour of the hand. You do not have to match every contour perfectly, considering the final artwork is intended to look somewhat natural. You will need to repeatedly warp each piece of the vine to get it in the right position.

Power Tip: Double-click on the Warp Tool to change its pressure or size. You can also change its size without double-clicking by holding down Shift+Alt, while you click-and-drag.

Step 6

Continue following the contour of the hand.

Step 7

It's easiest to trace the entire edge of the hand before adding vines within the body of the artwork. Again, the Warp Tool will significantly stretch the overall length of your vine. When making vines that contour around smaller shapes, like fingertips, it's important to use a much shorter vine to start off with.

Step 8

Follow the contour of the fingers.

Step 9

Take some creative liberties with how you trace each shape. You may decide to trace each finger instead of how I've illustrated below. The main point is that you trace the basic shapes first.

Step 10

Turn off the layer that has the image of your hand on it. This is what your artwork should look like once you have the basic shape defined. Throughout the process of building up vines, continually turn the layer with your hand photo on and off. This makes sure everything looks good.

Step 11

Continue adding more and more vines to fill in your image. Follow the flow of the artwork so that your vines don't look haphazardly placed. However, use your creative intuition when needed. You'll know when and where to break the rules if need be.

Step 12

Below you can see I took some creative license with how I made the vine. Obviously the finger isn't wobbly like the vine I drew, but it still looks good. Remember, when filling in small areas with vines, you must use a short vine to start off with.

You do not have to fill in every little area. You can place a minimal amount of vines in areas where your photograph has dark shadows, since when things are in shadow you can't see them anyhow. This is evident in Step 14 where the ring finger connects to the main part of the hand. See how there are a limited number of vines there.

Step 13

Once you're done filling in the hand, add some stray vines around the edges to give the artwork a slightly more natural look; as if the vines are growing off into a new direction.

Step 14

Add a deep blueish black gradient behind the artwork. Then place it on its own layer. By simply adding this background you can see how the mood and effectiveness of the artwork changes.

Step 15

This is what your artwork should look like so far.

Step 16

On a new layer make a leaf shape. You can find a maple leaf online and trace it or roughly draw in your own shape, as shown below.

Step 17

Giving the leaf variations in color will add to its realism. Using the Pencil Tool (N), draw a shape that looks like mine below. Use the Pathfinder Palette and break-up the leaf into sections. Then delete the leftover shapes that aren't part of the leaf.

Step 18

Select each section of the leaf and give it a subtle color change. This simulates light hitting different parts of the leaf.

Step 19

Copy several of the brown vines we used for the hand. Then adjust their color by going to the top and selecting Edit > Edit Color > Adjust Color Balance. Adjust your variables to match your leaf's color as best as possible. We change the color of several different vines at once so that the color is the same on each one.

Step 20

Make a few copies of the newly colored leaves and vines. Then vary their sizes and place them throughout the structure of the hand.

Step 21

Make a new layer behind the brown vines. Copy a few leaves and green vines and adjust their color to be slightly darker by going to the top and selecting Edit > Edit Colors > Adjust Color Balance.

We're creating the impression of leaves that are in shadow, so make sure all three numbers are the same. Your numbers may not be exactly the same as mine. As long as all three match, you're good to go.

Step 22

Vary the leaves sizes and rotations. Then place them throughout the structure of the hand.

Step 23

This is what your artwork should look like.

Step 24

Make sparkles by using the Ellipse Tool and drawing a condensed ellipse. Copy the ellipse and cross it over the other shape to make a star shape.

Step 25

Duplicate the shape several more times. Adjust the opacity of some of the sparkles to achieve the effect of each sparkle twinkling.

Make an elegant "S" shape instead of arbitrarily clumping the sparkles together, giving the sense of movement.

Step 26

Put the sparkles in front of and behind the vines to achieve the effect of the sparkles swirling around the hand.

Step 27

Don't go overboard with the sparkles!

Step 28

Draw an arch shape using the Pen Tool.

Step 29

Adjust its opacity and enlarge it to give the impression of stylized wind or general atmosphere.

Step 30

Make several more arches in varying sizes, shapes, and opacities.

Step 31

Alas, the completed fairy-tale inspired vine is complete!


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User Comments

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  1. Clemson July 14th

    Nice work. I like this idea.


  2. l0st-s0ul July 14th

    Love it!


  3. Mark July 14th

    I really like the final effect. nice one


  4. pica July 14th

    that’s pretty cool
    you can probably use it for many purposes… right now i’m thinking of veins or muscles for some anatomy thing… yeah, cool


  5. giackop July 14th

    yeah so cool!!

    useful tut!!


  6. Lee Milthorpe July 14th

    Magical. Nice techniques!


  7. Drupal Museum July 14th

    Very whimsical. I like it.


  8. Andrew July 14th

    Awesome! Nice result.


  9. Érica July 14th

    interesting!!!


  10. MONSTER July 14th

    Great tutorial and very nice result.

    Let’s give this one a hand.

    ;)


  11. Nate July 14th

    Awesome tut!


  12. Tim July 14th

    nicely done! thanks~


  13. Jonathan July 14th

    Pica: yeah, this effect would probably work well for that.

    Thanks everyone, I really appreciate the compliments!

    Jonathan


  14. Danny July 14th

    Thats pretty cool, I like the end product :)


  15. solwyvern July 14th

    Very wow, the finished trace looks very enigmatic^^
    Thanks, I’ve learned something new.


  16. Kim Dolleris July 14th

    Creative and beautiful! Good job and thanks for sharing!


  17. Ali July 14th

    nice!


  18. Mr.Ro July 14th

    very nice


  19. Cihangir July 15th

    Nice one.


  20. Nindia July 15th

    I love it! End result is mint!


  21. Alex Beltechi July 15th

    Love the hand gesture. Have you considered posting it on sxc? :P


  22. Shane July 15th

    Another fantastic vectortuts tutorial - thanks a lot for posting.


  23. K3v July 15th

    Very creative idea! Nice result! :)


  24. Jonathan July 15th

    alex: that’s a good idea. I might try that. I’d have to take the photo again because that one is not very high-res.


  25. Benjamin July 15th

    Hello It’s a verry good tutorial, but I’m french and I search a french tutor for me.
    I need help in vector art.
    Anyone can help me?
    Thanks.


  26. Cameron Smith July 15th

    Very impressive - I love it.

    Please tell me… how you pronounce the name of this website — VectorTuts.com is it… tuts (rhymes with cuts) or “Toots” (rhymes with fruits)?


  27. Tim July 16th

    very inspiring! thanks


  28. Jonathan July 17th

    Benjamin: I took french for 4 years in high school but I can’t speak any now!

    Cameron: It’s pronounced like “cuts”

    :)


  29. Qvectors July 17th

    looks easy enough but I probably would never been able to come out with such a nice artistic idea in the first place.


  30. GeekAllstar July 18th

    yeah this was a great tutorial its gonna help me with this dang i dea thats been rollin in ma head for bout a month THANX!


  31. Tom Glenn July 25th

    Awesome tutorial, very impressive indeed!


  32. Eithiriel July 27th

    Very creative.


  33. Muffenz August 3rd

    PDF Tuts never fails to aw at the ease and time consuming of all of their tutorials.


  34. Muffenz August 3rd

    Ops i spelled PSD wrong, thinking of maken a PDF today.


  35. amirreza August 4th

    just wanna say tax , keep going


  36. Johnny August 6th

    I have been searching for this exact thing for months! awesome tutorial and 3 cheers for stumble!


  37. Helen August 7th

    Fantastic tutorial. I’ve just finished it and it looks amazing, thanks! Just one question - I can’t figure out how to crop the artwork to the right size in Illustrator, and give it a border like you have. And if I try to export it into Photoshop, the quality decreases :( Please help!


  38. -]Phatp[- August 13th

    this kind of stuff is awesome


  39. Jonathan August 16th

    Helen,

    If your vines are going outside the edge of the background you really won’t be able to “crop” it in Illustrator (because gradient mesh cannot be cropped.) You can put a matte over the edges to make them all straight. If you have shapes that aren’t drawn with gradient mesh that go outside the edge of the background color then you can use the Pathfinder Palette to crop the art.


  40. Len2 August 19th

    Good tutorial!! I like it!…:D


  41. lizardboi August 23rd

    Neat indeed! I would tweak the color of the fingers in the back a bit darker tough, then thye would look more in the space, not flat lines.


  42. 5ivedance September 17th

    Awesome work, Thanks for sharing


  43. Kyle Gallant October 24th

    I have to say, I freaking love Vectortuts. With my current jobs and projects I really haven’t had time for vectors (or a need) but I feel that my skills are staying sharp by reading these tuts. I’m quickly learning new and interesting ways to illustrator… excellent work!


  44. Steve November 11th

    I couldn’t get the hang of the warp tool, so I made the original vine out of several overlapped ellipses, slightly decreasing in size and altering the colour of each, so that in the end I had what looked like a gradient, but my version could be turned into an art brush!


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