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OH GOD
It's just like my dream! I need to buy 1500 feet of extension cable and a small radio wave transmitter. |
That's some awesome drawing stuff :o
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My new wallpaper.
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That does look pretty fuckin sweet.
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Can I just ask which program(s) is being used to create these speed paintings?
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Thanks guys. As for the programs used, I started with an initial sketch using PaintChat (a free Java application, which kind of resembles something between MS Paint and Adobe Photoshop), and finished it off a bit more in Photoshop. I'm happy with any application that comes with opacity-setting brushes and good color pickers.
Some kind of digital tablet is not necessary, but it's nice to have. The Wacom Intuos series are great if you can afford them. The tablets don't truly give you the feel of a real pen/pencil, but it's pretty close. My personal favourite applications for digital painting are:
Hmm, did I forget any? openCanvas perhaps, which is a pretty cool multi-user "Photoshopesque" application, but I don't use it very often. |
I was looking at the opencanvas site (used the link in the apps thread) and what you can download from there is only a free 30 day trial unfortunately.
For a beginner, which would you suggest playing with to start off with? |
Quote:
As for beginning in the field of drawing/painting, stick with a pencil, marker or ink pen, and many sheets of cheap paper. Don't buy the expensive art sketchbooks from stores, look into the kind of 6x8" to 9x12" notebooks you use for school. The blank notebooks without any stylesheet lines are what you're looking for, and they're sometimes ten to fifteen times cheaper than regular sketchbooks per page, at least over here in Sweden. The best way to learn is to draw from life, and you will develop a sense of form and lighting impact far better than what can be learnt from studying photographs. If you do study photographs, try not to "copy" them, but try to understand them. Why does the light fall upon the object the way it does? How do the plants in the far background grow? Feel the gesture of the scene. |
Have you ever heard of a program called Paint.net?
I was flicking through a computer magazine called Computeractive (don't know if you've heard of it, if you have, Paint.net is described in the new issue - 18th to 31st August 2005) and this program caught my eye. It's freeware and is available to download from the Computeractive site. You may enjoy it: www.computeractive.co.uk/2129101 That link takes you to a page with a description of the program, specs (of sorts) and a link to download it. In the computer active magazine it is described: Quote:
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Tell me, why does the robot have it's hand on it's hip?
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why aren't there the little plugin things in the outlet?
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it's still freakin sweet. I like the second to last one the most!
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O Shit, It seems you have picked up quite a few skills in college... heh
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Nice man.. I really like that second to last one where it looks like a man walking through a cave by candle.
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Arkantis: Thanks.
Blahblah. http://www.zelaron.com/gear/mattemount.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/chor.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/creatureGesture.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/scraposky.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/stasos.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/burke.jpg http://www.zelaron.com/gear/angelo.jpg |
Wow. That mountain is amazing!
The doodles are great too. How'd you get so good? |
The buildings in one of those sketches remind me of Headlong.
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