Admin Post: Community Check-In for November
Nov. 30th, 2017 06:50 am
Did you take part in any fandom activities in November, or have you been working on any personal art projects? Are you currently trying to meet a deadline? Feel free to share upcoming challenges that have got you excited, any frustrations you've been experiencing, possible goals for the next month, and so on.
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Also, just a reminder that the Prompt Generator challenge is still on (even though it seems like everyone - myself included - needed this entire month as a break) and is supposed to end tomorrow. What do you guys think, should we extend the challenge? Or perhaps instead focus on organising the group art project for December? Let us know your thoughts in the comments. :)
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Date: 2017-12-06 12:45 am (UTC)Like if you want to produce digital art that still looks like traditional art, you'll probably want to just jump into a program that can do that (like ArtRage or Painter or Clip Studio Paint, which have brush engines that are excellent at mimicking traditional media), but the learning curve can be steeper. Some programs might not be able to handle really large file sizes, so if you want to draw and print out large files you'll have to make sure it handles up to the sizes you need (if you don't care about printing this doesn't matter as much).
But if you're just looking for something that's a relatively low bar to get into and just do something... If you're on Windows and don't mind paying a bit (does have a free trial, though), I think Paint Tool SAI might be the easiest to just use with a decent feature set and brush engine. It's not available for Mac though. Also Windows-only is Microsoft's Fresh Paint, which is interesting for a purely painting/drawing focus. Pretty limited, but might be good as a learning playground if you don't need a lot of image editing or layers.
I've also heard good things about FireAlpaca and Krita but also have heard mixed opinions on whether they're easy to use depending on who I talked to. Since they're free, though, it wouldn't hurt to try them out and see what you think. They're also available on all platforms.
There's also stuff like Tegaki (http://te2.tewi.us/) and Oekaki boards (or MS Paint for that matter, but the former two have social aspects) if you just want something real basic as you're learning to control the tablet with the hand/eye disconnect.