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WOW THIS ONE IS TOO CLOSE
when you have anxiety so you think about every possible thing that can go wrong in a situation and something goes wrong
This show never fails to go over the top with rich kids trying to out-rich each other
Where’s the fucking post of the guy with the huge chain whipping the swat team
Vibe check
I made a leaf brush in krita (to mimic an old one i made in Photoshop), and someone on discord asked if i could do a step-through of how i paint the leaves. So here’s a really quick instruction on how I achieved the bushy/dense tree top look. The brush itself isn’t actually finished. I want to make an animated brush with several different leaf types for more variation. But this was a test run.
Krita and Patterns - a love story
Okay, I love patterns. Like, I ADORE patterns and using them in my art, but its hard! I haven’t come across a program that lets me use my own patterns easily and seamlessly without much hassle. I’d always have to import, export, turn around, change format, upload to program, hope it works, not a pretty sight. I’d be left copy-pasting for hours to get things going.
No more! Now, with Krita, its a five step process!
Here’s what my Krita setup looks like, but this isn’t really important, as long as you know where your Tool Options are and have your Toolbox located.
Step 1: Find the Settings menu and go to Manage Resources…
Step 2: Click on the Import Patterns button (notice how there’s a crap ton here, you can import brushes and everything!) This opens your file explorer, here its your job to find the pattern file you want to use. When you double click it the file explorer just poofs but don’t worry, we have achieved what we came for.
Step 3: Now, go to the grainy picture where the arrow is, that’s your pattern selection. It has a lot of pre-set patterns but how often do you actually find the one you need from those? Your new import should be at the end of the selection. Don’t worry, the program does save these, it just arranges itself between boots so your imports will be there, you just have to scroll around to find them!
Step 4: Check that you are using the bucket tool, have your pattern selected and have the Use Pattern tickbox ticked in the Tool Options.
Step 5: Go nuts! It works just like the usual bucket tool
Ta-daah \__O__/
(the white box is me censoring all my files in the reference window ignore its existence)
Sorry for bothering, but do you know how to get Krita to let you paint color inside lines? For example, I drew line art and now want to color it entirely purple, how do I make it so the purple doesn't go outside the line art even if my cursor does?
Do you mean you want to color your actual lines, or if you want to fill your drawing with color (like a coloring book)?
Coloring Your Lines
For coloring your actual lines, you’ll want to lock the alpha of your layer. Sounds complicated. But its actually a one button fix. It makes it so that you can only draw on parts of the layer that have already been drawn on.
Now you should be able to color your lines any color you want to. You can fill them, use a brush, gradient, etc.
Coloring Inside Your Lines (Fill Tool)
If you have CLEAN line art. You can actually use the Fill Tool.
(An example of clean lineart. No breaks. Clearly defined, solid lines.)
Make a layer under your lines for your color.
You can find your fill tool on your Toolbox Docker. (Any missing dockers can be found under Settings>Dockers)
In your Tool Options, there is a setting that can make filling your line art very quick. Its called Grow Selection.
And if you set the number up till about 2 pixels, it should expand your fill tool so that it fills the line art nicely. Here’s an example of what the fill tool will do with and without the use of Grow Selection.
Now you can use the Fill Tool to click inside spaces and fill them with color. You can do each color on its own layer, if you wish.
You may have to go in with a brush and clean up small areas that the fill tool may not have reached, but this is a nice way to quickly fill clean line art.
You can also turn on alpha lock for color layers as well, and color inside them easily.
Coloring Inside Your Lines (G’MIC Filter)
If you’re like me, and you use sketchy, pencily lines, or you have a lot of breaks in your line art, the fill tool probably wont work so well. But there is a filter you can use to help.
First, create a layer under your lines like you did the last time. Now, fill in spots of the image with the color you’d like them to be. Make sure to set a color outside the lines, otherwise the filter will fill it with one of your other colors and the filter won’t work correctly. The color I used is lime green.
Now. SAVE your file.
Now, with your color layer selected, go to Filters>G’MIC.
Now choose “Active and Above” for Input. This tells G’MIC to consider your color layer and your lines layer, which is above it.
Next, in the filters list, under Black & White, choose Colorize (Comics).
(Don’t worry too much about what the Preview looks like, here. Mine always look chaotic and messed up. The actual filter looks much better)
Now, to the right. I usually have it set so that it creates a layer for each color.
After that, hit OK to run the filter.
Your result should look something like this.
From here, you can delete your background color layer and do any necessary clean up. If you want all of your colors on one layer, you can select them all by clicking on them while holding Shift, and merge them with Ctrl+E.
Now, this extra step is optional, but since my lines can sometimes be thin and see through, I tend to do this.
If you turn off your Line Art Layer (Its name is probably different, but it will be the layer above all the colors. You’ll see that the edges of the color are pretty sharp and not anti-aliased.
It can look kind of gross behind thin and seethrough lines. I use the Blur filter to fix it.
I set it to a radius of just 1 pixel. It usually does the trick.
Hit OK and run the filter, and your results should be a lot nicer behind your lines.
For more complicated line art, sometimes I use the filter fill the entire inside with just one color, alpha lock the layer, and color it by hand with a brush tool.
I hope this tutorial was helpful!
Louisville’s mayor Greg Fischer gets pwnd.
Sakura by Daniel Korzhonov
To everyone who tries shaming people with “y’all are too busy with [insert frivoulous fad here] to care about [insert important world issue here]”
It’s not healthy to only think about the negative.
me: *gets settled into bed*
my bladder:
Class Divide (Marc Levin, 2016)
”Then give white people some free advice.” ”They’re all in my books.” RIP Toni Morrison (February 18, 1931 - August 5, 2019)
inequality