[fallout spice of life] it’s time for sharing my piece for @newvegasguidezine !!! I had so much fun doing these as this is one of a few times I’m doing full illustrations. Thanks for the mods at New Vegas Zine for organising such a wonderful project!!
I think this may be one of my favorite drawings I’ve ever made. Looking at it just makes me unreasonably happy, and I just had to color it. It’s Killgore and Melissa from our studio’s DD&D game last year. You can check out the whole adventure here.
Finally playing D&D again. Here’s my Cleric, Roy, 13-year-old child of destiny. His dad was a survivalist who convinced Roy that he is mankind’s only defense from the oncoming darkness (whatever that is). Dad’s dead now, though, so we’re off to adventure. He worships the sun and he’s here to help.
"It’s a measure of how many dots will be printed per inch. Keyword: printed. DPI, contrary to many ideas around it, does absolutely nothing when it’s set in Photoshop for images that are displayed on the web."
"On the web, pixels reign.
"If your image is 100 pixels across, it shows on screen at 100 pixels across. Dpi means nothing to a browser. While certain programs can interpret dpi, like Photoshop, InDesign, or even Microsoft Word, browsers don’t. So you shouldn’t worry about setting images at 72 dpi."
(The only caveat I would add to this article is that Photoshop by default seems to use dpi for text. So 10 pt font will appear differently in a 72 dpi file than it will in a 300 dpi file.)