Says to follow along with him during the exercise. He doesn't say how he is editing so quick, making lines disappear and redraw within seconds, using a marker and then suddenly without changing tools the shadow fills itself, doesn't say what brushes or type he is using but yet He repeats again, "doesn't have to be perfect." Which is it instructor? 11, 8, or 10? How am I supposed to follow along with that? He says at one point, "lower your brush size to 11, no 8, or maybe 10." I would say perfect and precise are synonyms of eachother. : having all the required or desirable elements, qualities, or characteristics as good as it is possible to be. : marked by exactness and accuracy of expression or detail. You can add text to the picture and rotate and skew the picture using the toolbar on the right, delete, edit, and add other features like shadow, highlights, etc. What? so it doesn't have to be perfect but it does have to be precise! The comic panel editor in the MediBang allows you to select different shapes and colors of the objects from the picture and merge them together to form the picture. The following is all from just a single lecture, he said, "you don't have to be perfect but you have to follow the precise proportions so it doesn't look awkward." Hard to follow, I can't believe I'm possibly the first person out of so many students to say these things or call these points out. You will also be equipped with the knowledge to become a professional comic book artist and make money with your art.if that's what you want! ![]() I even use a FREE software called FireAlpaca so you don't need to buy any expensive software.īy the end of this course, you will be armed with the skills to create your own comic book art from scratch. Whatever skill level you are at (beginner, intermediate, advanced), this course is perfect for you! I even use a FREE software so you don't need to buy any expensive software. This is a COMPLETE comic book creation course - I will take you through my entire process from how I conceptualize ideas, initial drawing & sketching, finalize drawings, coloring, and setting up the comic layout which involves paneling, framing, & scripting. And my artworks have been featured by DC comics,Dark Wave Comics, Artix, Adventure Quest World, Long Beach Comicon, LA Comicon. I'm making it sound more complicated than it is-it really is just a gradient.Hello true believers and super fans! Welcome to my Comic Book Creation Masterclass. Instead, we're going to use our color wheel and go from yellow to red to brown. FireAlpaca is the free paint tool that is available in 10 languages and compatible with both Mac and Windows. Thing is, we're not going to draw just like the picture, because our lighting and our base color is different. We're going to simulate this-and I'll show a real candle to show what's going on. ![]() Firelight is red on the edges, yellow in the middle, and then goes white riiiiight where it's very hot. Thing is, because this is a see through object devoid of color really-what we are drawing is the heat of the light source itself. There's ways to simplify this, too, but even if you just do an overlay layer-the overlay layer won't be as convincing if it's one color, you move across the color wheel, especially with fire light. I think that no matter your art program, when you're painting light gradations, you want to do it in a blocking-in pass, where you define what colors go where-and then a pass where you take a smoothing brush and just smooth that sucker out. So you don't stay on the outside rung, you go into the grays in a smooth transition. When you add light, you want to start at the color of your light source, and move towards the direction of the color you're drawing on, and as you do, you choose colors to gradate moving inwards-inside the color wheel. We start with a candle-and it's unlit (or in this case it's lit by ambient light, just so we can.see what we're working with.) I made it a brownish gray because while the candle is usually off-white, it's in a dim room so we can see the lighting effects. So I have a demo but it's like 2 steps so I'll try and explain with words. ![]() Hopefully this isn't too much of a "Draw a circle, now draw the owl" type of explanation but I find it helps to think of what makes up the surface that the light is cast on (light which is, in this case, fire.) In the case of a candle, it's see through-so you aren't drawing so much light reflecting off of things, but drawing it go through things.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |