Another thing to consider is the canvas properties. If a monochromatic canvas or layer is created, the antialiasing of a brush can not be adjusted. A work around for the full or paint bucket not to leave artifacts after filling is to adjust area scaling for fill tool properties. I turn mine up all the way, this usually overlaps the edges of the feathered brush stroke. Of when using select tool or wand you can select from action bar to expand or contract selected area.
Hey, old video so not sure if you figured it out but you can use the anti-aliasing without getting the gap by upping the tolerance level on your fill bucket tool. This will tell the color to fill in the blank plus some of the interior gradients.
Thank you sooo much for this playlist Brian... It's really helping me get my head around Clip Studio, and the best videos I've found so far after months of looking. You're a star!
Thank you this helped me so much! But now I don’t know what to do about the blur? My lines are nice and straight like I want them but it’s a little blurry and I’m not sure why? Please help😣
sooo, if I am working on my comic and I use anti aliasing but then in the final output, I want smoother lines, is there any way around, like if I could smoothen the lines in the final output, like the olm smoother plugin for after effects??
so Anti-Aliasing is your line surrounded by transparent pixels, is there a way to change the transparent pixels into grey ones instead? so it mimics how a black Anti-Aliasing brush strokes but its actually grey and not transparent.
One question that I have, that for some reason I've never actually run into is... If you're drawing at say 300 - 600 dpi, what is the minimum brush size when the destination is a standard trade print? It seems that at those resolutions, if your brush is too small, once reduced the print wouldn't even show the line? That leads into my second question... how does one know and test the maximum level of detail one can have when drawing small things in a panel (Think of how eyes turn to dots at a distance). As far as Clip Studio video ideas, it might be cool to explore setting up the story feature and how that can help organize a graphic novel.
These are great questions and as an artist myself, had to make a lot of mistakes before figuring it out. The navigator window has a size reading. At 100% it is actual size of canvas you created. So if you compare a physical paper size with your canvas file size, it should match up at 100% unless in the preference settings, the display resolution is not set correctly. Also, I use an dual monitor setup with a much larger pen display, at the same dpi as my laptop so this can be tricky. I am always looking back at my laptop screen to compare to the actual size of canvas. Another tip is to set scaling preferences to limited scale ratio. I set mine from 25% so I don’t zoom out to much- to 100% so zoom in is not to much.
I'm gonna buy XP-Pen Artist15.6 15.6 Inch for my daughter and we never try art tablet. I heard art tablet is kinda monitor so need buy program. So clip studio pro is ok for that? And also should I download on desktop and connect tablet? 🤔 please tell me what to do.
Anti- Aliasing sounds like the opposite of the show Alias, where the college student is not a spy and does not find her boyfriend murdered in the bathtub.
Thank you! Perfect explanation, I'd been wondering why my lines looked pixelated at the edge
Glad I could help!
@@BrianShearer Thank you this was SO helpful. Do you have an tutorials on masking?
Another thing to consider is the canvas properties. If a monochromatic canvas or layer is created, the antialiasing of a brush can not be adjusted. A work around for the full or paint bucket not to leave artifacts after filling is to adjust area scaling for fill tool properties. I turn mine up all the way, this usually overlaps the edges of the feathered brush stroke. Of when using select tool or wand you can select from action bar to expand or contract selected area.
you just saved my life. thank you very much.
Hey, old video so not sure if you figured it out but you can use the anti-aliasing without getting the gap by upping the tolerance level on your fill bucket tool. This will tell the color to fill in the blank plus some of the interior gradients.
INTERESTING
Thank you sooo much for this playlist Brian...
It's really helping me get my head around Clip Studio, and the best videos I've found so far after months of looking.
You're a star!
Happy to help!
Thank you for the tutorial, I was wondering why my fill tool keeps going outside my lineart a little.
thanks, it helped a lot!
God, I needed this.
Thank you this helped me so much! But now I don’t know what to do about the blur? My lines are nice and straight like I want them but it’s a little blurry and I’m not sure why? Please help😣
sooo, if I am working on my comic and I use anti aliasing but then in the final output, I want smoother lines, is there any way around, like if I could smoothen the lines in the final output, like the olm smoother plugin for after effects??
Very useful, thank you!
Is it possible to activate ati aliasing again after filling the colors you needed
In vector layers i mean
so Anti-Aliasing is your line surrounded by transparent pixels, is there a way to change the transparent pixels into grey ones instead? so it mimics how a black Anti-Aliasing brush strokes but its actually grey and not transparent.
One question that I have, that for some reason I've never actually run into is... If you're drawing at say 300 - 600 dpi, what is the minimum brush size when the destination is a standard trade print?
It seems that at those resolutions, if your brush is too small, once reduced the print wouldn't even show the line?
That leads into my second question... how does one know and test the maximum level of detail one can have when drawing small things in a panel (Think of how eyes turn to dots at a distance).
As far as Clip Studio video ideas, it might be cool to explore setting up the story feature and how that can help organize a graphic novel.
These are great questions and as an artist myself, had to make a lot of mistakes before figuring it out. The navigator window has a size reading. At 100% it is actual size of canvas you created. So if you compare a physical paper size with your canvas file size, it should match up at 100% unless in the preference settings, the display resolution is not set correctly. Also, I use an dual monitor setup with a much larger pen display, at the same dpi as my laptop so this can be tricky. I am always looking back at my laptop screen to compare to the actual size of canvas. Another tip is to set scaling preferences to limited scale ratio. I set mine from 25% so I don’t zoom out to much- to 100% so zoom in is not to much.
I'm gonna buy XP-Pen Artist15.6 15.6 Inch for my daughter and we never try art tablet. I heard art tablet is kinda monitor so need buy program. So clip studio pro is ok for that? And also should I download on desktop and connect tablet? 🤔 please tell me what to do.
clip studio pro works fine. Just download it to your computer and you're ready to go
Anti- Aliasing sounds like the opposite of the show Alias, where the college student is not a spy and does not find her boyfriend murdered in the bathtub.
I am 100% pro-aliasing
👍😎