under the hood, clip studio operates per pixel only and bakes operations after every brush stroke, where as rebelle is actually warping the underlying canvas ( a bit like moving a zbrush mesh which is painted) so the details are retained
Thanks, Justice! I'm surprised Clip Studio Paint matched up as well as it did! ;) I am a comics artist and live and breathe CSP for everything *_except_* color, though for mainstream comics, it can do that, as well. But I got Rebelle 7 for its watercolor tools and hope to use the two together.
I'm so glad I found it :) I use CSP (the old version) as my main program and since a while Rebelle 5 as supporting one (unfortunately I can't afford upgrades to CSP 2.0 nor Rebelle 6 plus I think my laptop won't work at all with the newest Rebelle because it's too old :') ) and it's good to see this comparison of the upgraded versions :)
@@Lola_in_the_Black Second hand laptop and tablet go for chips 🍟 if you hunt, I'm still rebelle 5 god knows if my thing will run 7 lol I never thought about it, I'm still using wacom mobilestudio pro gen 1
Thanks for interesting experiments. I did comparison too with CSP2, Rebelle6 and Krita5 on my March 25 blog post. I'm slightly surprised Krita5 was close to Rebelle pigment. And CSP2 standard color mixing was better than perceptual one, i don't know why. My experiment method might be something wrong. I do traditional painting often and feel Rebelle color blending is most close to actual pigment, of course.
Sorry brow - but IMHO - when you mix oils - a Dark Blue - almost a utramarine, like this and a cadmium red, the mixture yelds into a deep dark purple violet. So, to me, CSP made a fantastic Job!
I agree! That red to blue mixture was pretty similar to what a cool blue/warm red mixture looks like with real oil paint. Also, that mixture was a great example of why Clip Studio offers the brightness correction setting that we can change to our liking.
under the hood, clip studio operates per pixel only and bakes operations after every brush stroke, where as rebelle is actually warping the underlying canvas ( a bit like moving a zbrush mesh which is painted) so the details are retained
Thanks, Justice! I'm surprised Clip Studio Paint matched up as well as it did! ;) I am a comics artist and live and breathe CSP for everything *_except_* color, though for mainstream comics, it can do that, as well. But I got Rebelle 7 for its watercolor tools and hope to use the two together.
I'm so glad I found it :)
I use CSP (the old version) as my main program and since a while Rebelle 5 as supporting one (unfortunately I can't afford upgrades to CSP 2.0 nor Rebelle 6 plus I think my laptop won't work at all with the newest Rebelle because it's too old :') ) and it's good to see this comparison of the upgraded versions :)
Hi rebelle 7 is 80% off right now for a limited time
@@maxhammer4067 Thank you! Unfortunately like I mentioned I can't use even Rebelle 6 because my laptop can't handle it so I'm staying with Rebelle 5
@@Lola_in_the_Black if I was you I would have got it in the sale any way you never know when you are going to upgrade system
@@maxhammer4067 The problem is I can't afford a new one and Rebelle 8 or 9 will go out sooner than I might get a new laptop
@@Lola_in_the_Black
Second hand laptop and tablet go for chips 🍟 if you hunt, I'm still rebelle 5 god knows if my thing will run 7 lol I never thought about it, I'm still using wacom mobilestudio pro gen 1
Thank you for the comparison!
😂. Glad to find your channel. I love Windows hardware AND Rebelle so I’m happy to find you.
It’s a great mix 😊
they fixed the issue with mixing red and blue on clip studio paint
Thanks for interesting experiments. I did comparison too with CSP2, Rebelle6 and Krita5 on my March 25 blog post. I'm slightly surprised Krita5 was close to Rebelle pigment. And CSP2 standard color mixing was better than perceptual one, i don't know why. My experiment method might be something wrong.
I do traditional painting often and feel Rebelle color blending is most close to actual pigment, of course.
Yeah, same experience
But it's still a good thing other devs try to follow rebelle's steps of natural color mixing
Celsys should have just bought the license for mixbox (same technology as used in Rebelle) instead of arrogantly making their own inferior version.
Sorry brow - but IMHO - when you mix oils - a Dark Blue - almost a utramarine, like this and a cadmium red, the mixture yelds into a deep dark purple violet. So, to me, CSP made a fantastic Job!
I agree! That red to blue mixture was pretty similar to what a cool blue/warm red mixture looks like with real oil paint. Also, that mixture was a great example of why Clip Studio offers the brightness correction setting that we can change to our liking.
How did you get the CSP tool icons to be colored like that?
it feels like rebelle 6 is the next level compared to others?
I agree. Love this program
Rebelle 6 Pro😃👍🙋🏻♂️
👍👍👍👍👍
I like his video's but he makes it so boring it's hard to look a full video sometimes
I will be waiting for sale 🥹🥹🥹