Early Trahearne Paintings | November 27, 2025

Trahearne in Orr, writing down notes on a large stack of papers he has propped against his lap. He's sitting and leaned back along several large coral growths.
“Trahearne in Orr” | Unfinished painting from 2015

Yesterday’s page of The Harbinger’s Path shares similarities with the earliest Trahearne art I ever painted – which made me want to scrounge them up and post here! I probably never posted them on their own to this blog, though they are in the Trahearne & Malyck compilation archive (which as of this post, is a bit out of date/hasn’t been updated for a while). 

These were both painted in 2015 – the top one started in August, and the one below November 2. I only know this because I usually include the creation date in the filename, which I’m glad I did here, because otherwise I would have misremembered the bottom drawing as older than the top drawing. They were also both initially WIP’s, but I ended up starting new projects with him instead of finishing these particular ideas (which you can see in that compilation archive – as well as this year’s comic project!). 

One of my favorite ways to imagine Trahearne is how his travels and studies in Orr might have gone. This is one of the most interesting aspects of his character, for me, and I think it’s partially because those adventures of his weren’t explored in-depth in the story. Which makes it great fun for us to think about what experiences he might have had! 

Trahearne drawing a map on a scroll on his lap, as he looks off-camera and smiles toward an unseen figure.
“Friend and Mentor” | Unfinished painting from 2015

These earlier paintings leaned heavily into his “scholar” background, as from what I remember, this was emphasized more during the sylvari personal story – I started playing the game in 2014, and didn’t play the sylvari personal story for several months afterward – so these drawings are heavily influenced by playing the Zhaitan arc relatively recently. 

Additionally, if you recall, Heart of Thorns released October 23, 2015. Which means the first painting was painted before and in anticipation of its launch, and the second after I played the Heart of Thorns story. In the full composition for this second one, Malyck is sitting next to him. They’re also meant to be back in the Grove. I am pretty sure I remember starting this painting as a sort of way to cope with how Heart of Thorns concluded for Trahearne, which is likely why I added the “friend and mentor” title in the filename. :p And likely also how I wished there had been development time to include Malyck in the narrative. 

Trahearne & Malyck Sketch | October 17, 2025

Monochromatic drawing with Trahearne and Malyck from Guild Wars 2. Accent colors for both characters' eyes - glowing orange for Trahearne, glowing cyan for Malyck. Malyck leans against Trahearne's shoulder. Sketched them again yesterday in-between waiting for commission feedback! I’m so happy I started drawing with lines again this year. I have to admit that before this year, most of the time I found line drawing one of the less enjoyable parts for me. Which is a bit peculiar, as I loved drawing when I first started art – pencil drawing was my favorite for many years. 

This year has felt like rediscovering all those aspects about drawing which made me fall in love with art in the first place. I haven’t spent time enjoying drawing lines for so long – before now, it was a necessary step, not my favorite one. Which is why I was very surprised when I recently realized the line step has become my favorite part about drawing comic pages. 

I think part of it was also doing those occasional pencil drawings this year. I truly forgot how pleasurable it is to use a mechanical pencil for more than jotting down loose concepts. Before February, I can’t even recall the last time I sat down and tried making a pencil drawing look presentable. I’d been so separate from physical media for so long, that I marveled at the control of the graphite, the texture of the paper, dealing with brushing away those eraser bits without smudging the drawing. All those parts about drawing which sound pretentious to describe, but which are difficult to explain its appeal otherwise. 

Slightly wider crop of the previous drawing, where we can see both characters' fingers are intertwined. Anyway, that is to say, both this drawing and the previous one are results from using an opacity brush to sketch with again (meaning a brush with pressure sensitivity). I haven’t used one for doing line sketches/drawing for a few months. Before now, it tended to be a crutch for me – it made me take too long with squirrelly, indecisive lines I was never satisfied with. That’s partially why I switched to sketching with a hard brush for the past few months (meaning a brush without pressure sensitivity), both in the comic pages and in sketches. It’s probably easiest seen in the Diarmid drawing from August. That line drawing, in particular – even though the line portion is only a rough sketch – it turned out much stronger than my line drawings or sketches usually do. The idea is described more clearly, because having that hard brush forces me to make a decision with where to place the line. It prevents me from endlessly deliberating, as I tended to do when using brushes with pressure sensitivity. 

I’m essentially describing the advantages many artists have described in advocating for sketching with ink versus pencil in physical media. (Though of course, digital has the significant difference of being able to easily erase – even when you “ink,”) 

I’ve briefly tried ink sketching before in physical media – it’s very enjoyable, but my results were always mixed. Which made me unable to overcome the sense that I was just wasting paper. This is the main reason I didn’t persist with it. 

This is becoming more rambling than I intended – the point I meant to jot down here is, I began sketching with an opacity brush again because I was trying to recreate the feeling I enjoyed so much when doing the Trahearne pencil drawing from the other day. I really loved the process of drawing that one. The strange thing about using opacity brushes digitally is, that “squirreliness” which always plagued me in digital line drawings – it wasn’t happening in these pencil drawings (or, it was at least happening less). I’m not sure why. I suspect it’s a combination of physical having more “permanence,” which perhaps forces me to be more decisive. Practicing sketching with the hard brush over the past few months likely also helped. 

After using the hard brush to sketch, sketching with an opacity brush again felt so strange! In a good way. This time, it seems easier to be more decisive. And I think I am better avoiding that “squirreliness,” while also adding the benefits you gain from having pressure sensitivity available to you. 

I’ll have to continue doing experiments with both types of sketching!