Man the doors of possibility are swinging wide open for me with Kittl! Thank you for another great demo video 😊 All I need now is the Brush/Pen tool and the ‘ole Magic Wand, and I’m pretty much set to migrate away from Photopea altogether...
Great video teaching technique..The first one looks better because of the darker background and the darker flowers contrasting against the white letters. Which also makes this a great lesson on placement and color choices.
When I first became aware of your software project a couple years ago it looked amazing as a great reference source. I retired as a teacher here in Oz after 9 years US Army ... moved here in 1979. I draw everything, airbrush and hand paint most projects from illustration to fine art. The addition of AI to your software concerns me. I understand it allows people to skip learning how to hand do things and allow them to avoid practice for "Mussel Memory". The idea of an AI, means; I would think, anyone may be able to produce a copy??? I have a degree in Fine Art, an "Art Teaching" Certificate and an Associate Degree in Business Admin. I've done murals from 4 story murals to "book markers". I have over 1,000 fonts, many from "Letter Head". I've run workshops for the Sydney Opera company, Fox studios, Disney, Sydney Theater Group... and several other company's and government groups. Food for thought ... I think the offer of Fonts is great, as many of the ornament references.
Okay, hi, I actually am a graphic designer. 16 seconds in. I get the point you're trying to make with depth, but both of those designs are actually really, really bad. There isn't nearly enough contrast between the white font and the light background to make it easily readable, and adding additional elements on top of the letters for depth actually only makes this problem far worse. With a typographical design, readability should be your primary focus. Adding a border around the letters would help them stand out more, but would ruin the aesthetic you're trying to accomplish. Changing the background to a slightly darker color and using florals with darker hues (avoiding whites/lights/yellows) to make the white letters contrast more is the play here. You'll get a far more polished product that anyone can read, even those with less than perfect vision. 👍
I know if I can't easily read it, I couldn't care less about the design. I'd immediately scroll right past on social media and would never buy. Maybe we are the exception but in doubt it. Less is always more for me.
Thanks for the comments and points. :) The purpose was more about the technique of using the eraser tool. Preference will come into play at some point about color, stroke, etc. Cheers.
Wowwwwww, that looks amazing 😻 I will try it definitely
Go for it!
Man the doors of possibility are swinging wide open for me with Kittl! Thank you for another great demo video 😊
All I need now is the Brush/Pen tool and the ‘ole Magic Wand, and I’m pretty much set to migrate away from Photopea altogether...
So happy to hear that!
Oh my gosh! LOVE this!! Thank you for taking time to show us the extended uses of the eraser tool! I hope you have a blessed weekend!
You are most welcome! Hope you enjoy using it this way!
Thanks Drew, always awesome!
Cheers!
Great Video, Thanks so much for demonstrating this design hack!
You are most welcome!
Amazing feature! Definitely utilize this feature! Kittl ftw!
Yes! Absolutely!
I love the eraser tool been wanting this for a long time
So have we!
Great video teaching technique..The first one looks better because of the darker background and the darker flowers contrasting against the white letters.
Which also makes this a great lesson on placement and color choices.
Glad you enjoyed it!
@@Kittldesign I love when a change in color or depth makes the whole image look better. These are valuable lessons
Talk about a game changer, thanks Drew!!
Most welcome!
awesome idea really can transform your art to next level thanks
For sure!
Loving the eraser tool!
Happy to hear that!
How fun. Thanks for the demo.
Thanks for watching!
Outstanding again.
🙏
LOVE - thanks Drew.
Most welcome!
Thank You!
Most welcome!
Love this‼️💐👏‼️💐👏
🙏
When I first became aware of your software project a couple years ago it looked amazing as a great reference source. I retired as a teacher here in Oz after 9 years US Army ... moved here in 1979. I draw everything, airbrush and hand paint most projects from illustration to fine art. The addition of AI to your software concerns me. I understand it allows people to skip learning how to hand do things and allow them to avoid practice for "Mussel Memory". The idea of an AI, means; I would think, anyone may be able to produce a copy???
I have a degree in Fine Art, an "Art Teaching" Certificate and an Associate Degree in Business Admin. I've done murals from 4 story murals to "book markers". I have over 1,000 fonts, many from "Letter Head". I've run workshops for the Sydney Opera company, Fox studios, Disney, Sydney Theater Group... and several other company's and government groups.
Food for thought ... I think the offer of Fonts is great, as many of the ornament references.
Thanks for sharing.
Is it me or is the text barely readable?
The text in the design? Perhaps this will depend on what the final size of the printed poster is.
Okay, hi, I actually am a graphic designer. 16 seconds in. I get the point you're trying to make with depth, but both of those designs are actually really, really bad. There isn't nearly enough contrast between the white font and the light background to make it easily readable, and adding additional elements on top of the letters for depth actually only makes this problem far worse. With a typographical design, readability should be your primary focus. Adding a border around the letters would help them stand out more, but would ruin the aesthetic you're trying to accomplish. Changing the background to a slightly darker color and using florals with darker hues (avoiding whites/lights/yellows) to make the white letters contrast more is the play here. You'll get a far more polished product that anyone can read, even those with less than perfect vision. 👍
I know if I can't easily read it, I couldn't care less about the design. I'd immediately scroll right past on social media and would never buy. Maybe we are the exception but in doubt it. Less is always more for me.
Thanks for the comments and points. :) The purpose was more about the technique of using the eraser tool. Preference will come into play at some point about color, stroke, etc. Cheers.