SoCal! South Bend! Detroit! Art, comics, music, photographs! I take requests, sometimes! so HMU I guess
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Now a reality

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When you realize there’s no double bass in ACNH
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2019 Inktober, but with digital inks. Day one, ring
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Fired up the ol Storyboard machine today
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It’s almost Christmas
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Hey if you ever found that you’re not sure how zoomed in your should be while working in your digital file, and you’re like me and lose all sense of size reference when you’re on a not-so-fancy tablet, here’s a cheat sheet comparing line weights in digital vs. meatspace line weights.
The pixel counts were made in a 600 dpi file, so if you have a canvas set at 300 dpi, you need to halve the brush size. Oh and it was made using Clip Studio Paint Ex brushes
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this post made me buy clip studio
Small Tips For ClipStudio
I have some hours before work so I’ll use them to actually detail why I’ve found CSPaint to be so efficient for bastard-aligned painters who like to take shortcuts.
This will seem familiar to most of you guys, but this functions a little bit different from Photoshop. It turns everything you draw on the layer into editable curves, but retains the aliased smoothness of an ordinary raster layer. Practically a cheat to access the whole suite of amazing tools CS offers for lineart. Such as:
The vector eraser is The Best™. You can be as messy as possible and this tool erases the excess. One pen-flick and it’s done. Much faster than cleaning it up by hand. You can also tweak the settings of this brush to encapsulate more/less lines as you erase but that’s getting a little more involved. Anyway, last thing:
Maybe the only thing better than the vector eraser. There are multiple settings, but these three are the most handy. You can smooth wiggly edges, connect broken strokes, and tweak the width/weight to exactly how you want it. This also has a ton of settings you can play around with. It’s great!
There’s a lot more tools you can use, but you get the point! It’s a really good drawing program. I recommend it!
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