Little sky paintings i drew to use as backgrounds for insta stories.. fell free to use them for whatever (with credit)!ā„ļø

@theartofmadeline
No title available
Today's Document
I'd rather be in outer space šø
we're not kids anymore.
hello vonnie
Three Goblin Art

Origami Around
Sweet Seals For You, Always
One Nice Bug Per Day
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

ē„ę„ / Permanent Vacation
taylor price
noise dept.

ā

blake kathryn
šŖ¼
No title available

Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil

seen from Argentina
seen from India
@art-tips-references
Little sky paintings i drew to use as backgrounds for insta stories.. fell free to use them for whatever (with credit)!ā„ļø
the coloring system is so big that i donāt know what your problem really is, the environment, the style, the blending, or the whole picture looks just wrong and you donāt know exactly why. so iām going to start from the problem iāve been through.
this is what i know and how i do in short, please donāt take it as a tutorial or something. sorry for the bad grammar and ugly handwriting.
speech bubble lettering tips!
just saw somebody in my notifications sayingĀ āwhy donāt these tutorials ever say sometimes you canāt point the tail towards someoneās mouth without completely redoing the pageā
to which my response is: thatās an issue of poor planning on your part, not mine.
Donāt leave your speech bubbles until last, while youāre planning out your initial layout and deciding on what you want in your panels and where you want them, make absolutely certain your speech bubbles fit & read well.
To be honest I donāt quite see how you would have any issue with pointing a tail in the general direction of someoneās mouth unless youāre having tails cross, in which case - again, thatās down to your planning.
If you donāt want to wind up redoing an entire page because your speech bubbles donāt work, donāt start drawing out your entire page until youāre certain your bubbles are going to work - and then you wonāt have to scrap everything later.
Studying Trees by Fabian Rensch
i have some more tips but i have to get back to homework!!! i hope this was helpful anon
Togashi Yoshihiro commentary on the Yu Yu Hakusho artbook (part 2 of 2)
Related reading: Yoshirin de pon!
Togashi Yoshihiro commentary on the Yu Yu Hakusho artbook (part 1 of 2)
Related reading: Yoshirin de pon!
Bullshit
BRILLIANT
@petermorwood
Swords from nails are cute: for how-to reference, hereās a video.
And here are some more ex-nails.
This looks like something Terry would have given the Nac mac Feegle. (NB, must glow blue in the presence of lawyersā¦)
If you want something bigger, there are plenty of photos of handsome knives made from old US railroad spikesā¦
This one is so well-finished that it looks incomplete without a proper grip; of course a grip would conceal its origin. YMMV. Swings and roundabouts..
Not just knivesā¦
There are even swords (with extra metal added, of course).
Thereās an attractive Middle Earth Elvish look to these.
Man that first one is like swords for mice
@hellatrans
@we-are-blacksmith
I⦠kind of want to try this nowā¦
All images are used purely for educational purposed and are credited to their sources and owners. Ā Any image without credit was created by me.
Beating Brush Lag in Manga Studio
Booooooooo⦠what is this, Photoshop?!
Lagging brushes are an occasional problem in any illustration software. Hereās a troubleshooting guide for Manga Studio if your tools are acting like molasses. (Some settings may be different on Windows or if youāre running the Clip Studio Paint branding of the software. For what itās worth,Ā Iām running Manga Studio 5.0.3 on Mac OS 10.7.5. Yup, Iām behind the times.)Ā
There are a few options to beat the lag:Ā
1. Quit Stuff Bye bye, YouTube. See ya, Skype. Later, Tumblr.
Save your computerās processor by quitting RAM-hogging apps and tasks while painting. Streaming audio/video will drastically reduce performance, but even leaving browsers open can slow things down, so best to just close it up. Guess that rules out Spotify, but then thereās always ye olde Zune. Gotta love cringing through those high school playlists while working.
2. Change Preferences Easier than changing your mind, and quicker too.
Check under the hood of Manga Studioās Preferences for a few speed boosts. Do the following in these sub menus:
Preferences/Tablet/Tablet Settings: Change from 1 to 6 (I believe this option is Mac only).
Preferences/Performance/Undo: Lower the Undo count. Try taking it down 10-15 notches from default. You could also turn up that long-titled setting (āDelay before recognizing new objectā¦ā) by 100 ms, but I havenāt figured out what that does exactlyā¦
Preferences/Cursor/Display Position of Reversed Cursor: Make sure to check āNo Delayā.
After changing preferences, itās a good idea to close and reopen Manga Studio.
3. Modify Brush Tool Settings Your brushes may take it personally, but remember youāre in charge here.
The Tool Settings window is a wealth of options for customizing brushes. Some are more processor-intensive than others. Here are a few of the best ones to modify:Ā (Note: the look and behavior of brushes may be affected. You may want to duplicate and/or export a brush before changing its settings.)
Tool Settings/Anti-Aliasing: Turn down to āLittleā or āNoneā
Tool Settings/Brush Tip: Reduce the number of materials on your brush.
Tool Settings/Stroke/Space: Increase spacing, but not too much. Brushes are essentially a string of material stamps. A low space setting means a smoother brush, but more work for your computer. Picture it frantically scrubbing a rubber stamp across your canvas. On that note, also make sure Continuous Spraying is not on.
Tool Settings/Watercolor Border: If your brush uses this setting, turn on the āProcess After Dragā option. This renders the effect after each brush stroke and saves computing power.
Tool Settings/Correction: Turn off (or decrease) Stabilization, Post Correction, and Brush Stroke.
Tool Settings/Starting and Ending: Turn off all this stuff. Pfffft, who needs it, right?
Hereās a speed test after fiddling with some settings:
Ā Woooooooo! Weāre getting faster! Still a bit laggy, which leads to one last tip:
4. Rework The Canvas Might as well rework my life goals too.
Okay, disclosure: The two gifs in this post were recorded on a 4500x3000 canvas at 300dpi with a size 500 brush to emphasize lag. This third one is recorded on a 1080x720 canvas at 72dpi with a size 100 brush:
Yes! Weāre cruising now!Ā
Canvas sizing and resolution has a big affect on brush performance. Itās a bit of a conundrum. Getting the best image quality meansĀ working at a minimum resolution of 300dpi, which can be taxing for brushes on large canvases. So what to do?Ā Just like traditional paintings start with thumbnail sketches, digital work can start on a low-resolution canvas.Ā Hereās the method:
Set up your canvas normally at the full target resolution. But before drawing anything on the canvas, use the handy tool under Edit/Change Image Resolution. Reduce Resolution to 72dpi. Use this smaller canvas for rough sketching, background filling, blocking in large areas of color, etc. Then increase resolution to 144dpi for building up the body of the painting, still keeping it loose. (Iād recommend switching Interpolate to Hard Outline when increasing resolution.) Finally, blow it up to full resolution and get into the nitty gritty of rendering. This is where youāll do the crisp line work, highlights, details, etc.
The idea here is to work big to small. This will keep away brush lag by using large brushes on small canvases. As the canvas resolution increases, decrease brush size and work smaller, tightening things up in the process.Ā NOTE: Increasing canvas resolution causes pixilation. Donāt worry about it. This can be cleaned up in the final stages of painting.
Hope this guide is helpful! If lagging persists, remember to check drivers and tablet settings as well. If all else fails, GoogleāsĀ a good friend ;)
-Armin
From Up on Poppy Hill
Garden Of Words
Ponyo
Shokugeki no Souma
Ladies VS Butlers
Sword Art Online
Red Data Girl
Tamako Market
Servant x Service
Samurai Flamenco
Yumeiro Patissiere
5 Centimeters per Second
Summer Wars
Wolf Children
Shokugeki no SoumaĀ
Ponyo
Howlās Moving Castle
Tamayura Hitotose
Grave of the FirefliesĀ
How dare you
today stitch feels like telling you a big truth, you can be truly amazing and do great things, because you are specialĀ
thank you, stitch
Iām gonna cry. This is so sweet š
This gives me life
Reblogging this on my art blog! A short description of the steps is under the cut uwu
Keep reading
do you use refs? or do you use an initial ref for a char then go from there, or is it all just what you feel like putting on? i just really love how you've created depth to each character. they all have a clear style and attitude... yeah. thank you, lovely xx
Thank you! :D The answerās under āread moreā because itās long and with pictures :)Also I need to tag @andreahmrlm here because they asked a very similar question (if I understood right), hope itās ok :)
Keep reading
When you start comparing yourself to other artists but you remind yourself that their success isnāt your own and you know youāll get better if you continue working hard on your own work and take inspiration by the artists you envy instead of being petty with a bad attitude.
step by step
hope this is clear enough! this is how i do it but iām sure there are other methods hah
Stumbled across your art recently, and I totally admire your work! As a complete noob to the digital art scene, I'd just like to ask whether you have any tips on colour picking (like for skin tones, under varied/dramatic lighting and such!). I have a ton of other things I want to ask, but I'll limit myself to one question and then try to google the rest, haha/ Thanks for sharing your art with us! ^^
ahh thank you so much! ā„ welcome to the digial art scene friend, i hope you enjoy your stay and ctrl + z
now onto your question! (if you donāt know what layer and layer modes are and how they generally work you should probably google that before you continue reading)
we all perceive colour differently (thx science) and i trust my intuition a lot when it comes to colour picking because of that, and also because i feel like you can make pretty much every colour combination work within the right context. context is key! but still, remember that all of this is about how i perceive colour, so you might not agree with everything i say.
hereās a quick rundown of terms youāll see around a lot in reference to colours and shading: the hue, which is the ācolourā itself, the saturation aka the intensity, and the brightness [or value] which describes how dark or bright we perceive a colour to be.
rule of thumb: when you shade donāt just add black (or white) to your base colours, that will make your drawings boring and lifeless. use different hues and saturation!
now first things first: which skin colour does the character have?
youāll mostly be navigating in the red to yellow spectrum for the skin tone. so when i pick the base colours i usually start with the skin and adjust the rest of the colours accordingly. if youāre not sure where to begin it might help if you first determine the values (brightness) of the base colours in grayscale.
and here are a few colour variationsāi stuck to the approximate values but played around with a lot of different hues and levels of saturation.
now compare 3 and 5: youāll notice that 3 is very bright and leans towards orange hues, whereas 5 has a pinkish tint.
on the left i gave 5 the hair colour of 3 and in my opinion the pink hue of the skin doesnāt go well with the orange undertone of the hair. youāll have to experiment a lot to find out which combinations work for you. Ā
ctrl + u is your biggest friend (or image >> adjustments >> hue/saturation in photoshop, the shortcut works in sai and clip studio paint too). play with the sliders and see what happens. i do that a lot myself, because itās easier to coordinate the colours like that afterwards instead of trying to manually pick perfectly matching ones right away.
for further adjustments i like to use an extra semi-transparent layer on top of everything with just a single colour to add atmospheric light. this unifies the colours and makes them more harmonious, if thatās what youāre looking for. this is about as far as iād go if i didnāt want to shade the drawing.
if i do want to shade, especially with high contrasts and dramatic light, i darken the base by just adding an additional black layer, here set to 40% opacity. of course you could add a colour layer like the ones i mentioned previously too.
to create an impression of dramatic light you need a high contrast between light and dark areas (1). if i want additional visual intrest i often add secondary light which falls onto the main shadow areas. here i picked a faint greenish blue to balance out the yellow (2). and since light is at least partially reflected when it hits a surface you should add a faint glow that goes across the shadow/light border (3).
for this shading style i like to use the layer mode colour dodge with lowered opacity + fill settings. for some layer modes opacity and fill do the exact same thing (e.g. for multiply or screen). however for colour dodge thereās a big difference:
a lowered opacity merely alters the transparency of the entire layer. that looks pretty awful sometimes, because the bright orange affects the dark of the hair much more intensely than the already brighter skin. but when you lower the fill percentage you primarily lower the amount of light that falls onto darker colours. so the layerās opacity setting treats every colour equally whereas the fill setting takes their values into consideration. it might be hard to understand if you donāt try it out yourself, so just play around to get a feel for how it works!
and to summarise, hereās a process gif:
colour is an extremely big topic and iāve only barely scratched the surface but i hope that still helped you out a little! the fastest way to learn is always to try things yourself, so grab a sketch and experiment. š