headwax. opened this issue on Apr 30, 2014 · 9 posts
booksbydavid posted Thu, 01 May 2014 at 11:18 AM
Quote - oh it was just point and shoot!
I used the clone thing in painter which means the fur brush picks up the underlying colours of whatever you are cloning.
I went over it with a normal paint job to add a bit of shadow.
I havn't figured out layers in painter yet :( it only lets me paint on the canvas - bottom layer - so I have to read the destructions I guess. I reckon that the go would be to paint the fur in different layers then use faint drop shadows. Painter lets you use a few different clone sources which eans you could have a source which represented shadows and a source which was just ambient light and thengo between the two I think.
you know the great thing about painter is I now can render my images without aa. As I will be 'oiling' them up in post work. So in a scene which is 14 inches by 28 inches at 300 dpi I can save an enormpus amount of render time. It's bliss . Krita eh , will need to check that.
cheers from here :)
Thanks.
Haven't had much time to play with Krita, but I do like how it handles brushes. And the resource section on their site has good collection of brushes (a bit down the page). I do know that the layers in Krita behave like layers in Photoshop or Paintshop.