
Step 1
First, do some sketches of your character before
you turn on your computer. Getting things down on paper will stop you from
staring at a blank screen in Illustrator.
Once you've sketched out some ideas, make a new document the size of the postcard (148-x-105mm) and create two layers, one called Background and one called Artwork. If you're using the file from the CD, open and place it on the Background layer, and lock it.

Step 2
Using your original sketches for reference, start
drawing the main character on the Artwork layer. Using the pen tool,
set the fill colour to a suitably beastly tone and turn off the stroke.
Start to draw a rough shape of the outline of your creature.

Step 3
As the character is going to be symmetrical, and
looking straight ahead, draw half of the shape with the pen tool, then
copy-&-paste it (Ctrl/Cmd+C, Ctrl/ Cmd+V). Next, reflect the copied
shape by choosing Object > Transform > Reflect.
With the smart guides on (Ctrl/Cmd+U), drag the copied shape by the top anchor point using the Direct Selection tool to meet the same point on the original shape. Select both points by dragging over them and press Ctrl/Cmd+J. Select 'smooth' and click 'OK'.

Step 4
Now for the bumps. Using the ellipse tool, hold
down Shift, and drag, making a circle the size you want each bumpy bit
to be.
Copy-&-paste the circle, and position them around one half of the character from the top down, creating the bumpy effect. When you reach the last circle, select the bottom half of it and press Delete.
This will get rid of half of the circle and just tidies things up a bit. Open the pathfinder palette and, while holding down the Alt key, click Add To Shape Area. This closes the shape.

Step 5
Select all the circles and copy, paste and
reflect, as in step 3. Move your copied circles, so the top circle lies
exactly on top of the original set. Delete the very top circle so you
don't have any overlapping. While one circle is selected, choose Select
> Same > Fill Color, this will select all the circles and the
rough shape underneath. Hold down Alt and click Add To Shape Area in the
pathfinder palette. This will create one solid shape.

Step 6
Next you need to add detail and features to the
character. To make its mouth, use the ellipse tool to draw the size and
shape you want. You can adjust the shape by clicking on individual
anchor points, and use the cursor keys to move. Once you're happy with
the shape, make some teeth.

Step 7
Lay a square over a circle and use the use the
Add To Shape Area function to make a single shape. Arrange the teeth
around the mouth, copying-&-pasting as you go.
You can change the shape and size of each tooth as you go round, as well as rotating them to fit the curve of the mouth. Copy-&-paste the top row of teeth, and flip them 180-degrees for the bottom row.

Step 8
Select the mouth shape and teeth, and
copy-&-paste it. Click the Divide tool in the Pathfinder palette;
this splits everything into separate pieces. Delete everything from the
mouth apart from the teeth. Delete the teeth from the original mouth and
replace with the cut-out ones.

Step 9
To make the mouth more detailed add different
shades of ellipses to create depth in the mouth. To make a lighter
shade, reduce the amount of black in the colour, and for a darker shade,
increase it.
Draw some drip shapes using the pen tool in a lighter colour to create monster saliva. Once you're happy with the mouth, drag it onto the monster shape, and position it.

Step 10
Next, add some more detail to the monster. Draw
veins by making curvy lines with the Pen tool. Use a lighter colour and
various stroke weights. Try to make the lines as smooth as you can by
manipulating the anchor points and pulling the handles on each point.
This will take practice, but once you get a feel for how the
handles affect the curve of the lines, it will become easy. Remember to
turn Smart Guides off when drawing with the pen tool.

Step 11
Try not to use the copy-&-paste function
too much with the smaller details, or your character will become too
static. Use as much variety of lines and shapes as you can.
Use darker shades to make extra furry, bumpy bits on your monster and a lighter colour to make bubbles with tiny circles to give his skin some texture.

Step 12
Now your beast is finished - you just need to
make him look a bit more alive and magical. To do this, select the main
black shape, and copy-&-paste it. Lay it over the top of the
character and select Effect > Blur > Gaussian Blur. In the pixel
box, type in 5, the click OK. Next, open the Transparency palette and
select Multiply from the drop- down menu, and reduce the opacity to 50
per cent. Hold down Shift and drag the shape to make it a bit bigger,
then select Object > Arrange > Send to Back.

Step 13
To add the sparkly bits, make a small white
circle. Go to Filter > Distort > Pucker and Bloat. In the value
field, type -75, click OK.
Copy-&-paste this shape lots of times. Scale to make some bigger, and some smaller. Arrange in little clusters all around your monster. That's your finished character.

Step 14
Finally, as this is a self promotional
postcard, you will need to add your logo or name to the front and if you
like, your contact details (however, these could be on the back to
avoid overcrowding the image) you can also add further detail such as
clouds and trees to give more depth to your finished piece.
And that's it, one postcard, complete with beast. Now just get it
printed and post hundreds of them to people you want to work for and
patiently await the commissions!
I'm a Web-Graphic Designer, Freelance and Webmaster, blogger and more. I like to push the boundaries. I love creating unique, clean, usable design for the web and other digital sources.

