Man I needed this video a couple of weeks ago 😭 I tend to make my canvases bigger than what I need because I’m afraid of losing quality when I comes to sizing for printing. This will definitely help with that, thank you so much!!
you saved my life!!! i was drawing with a pixel brush in 200 x 200 and i couldn't figure out how to resize it without throwing it through a trash compressor, thank you!
Thank you! As someone who's used photoshop for over a decade and been used to drawing at 3000 x 3000 px at 300dpi i used to feel so comfortable with scaling my art down, but on procreate it feels so different and i've been clueless.
Tysm! I needed this information so bad. I’ve always wanted to make high-quality pieces, but I’ve been afraid that after all my work, I won’t be able to share or post it anywhere because the canvas is too big, and social media platforms will reduce the quality. Thank you again!!
Helpful stuff, for sure. Hopped on from the email as well. I have some scenarios where those tips might not apply but I'm not sure. The scenario might be in drawing a character and I might draw one foot and then just duplicate that layer so I don't have to redraw the other side. Initially after duplication it might be clean but if I move it or resize by the usual way of the transform tool, then it goes blurry on me. I had never used nor changed the Interpolation features so not sure why this is acting up now.
this video was awesome!!!only the video could solve my problem , and it was very very simple,thank you so much ,please make more videos,because your way of expression is excellent!!!😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
I'm not sure how to use these tools for making a canvas smaller? bc when i make the canvas smaller it crops my image- do i play with nearest neighbor tools first before resizing?
I'm so new to design and procreate. I've done 2 logos but they are coming out so blurry. I think I'm setting up the canvas wrong! Not exactly sure what the issue is...
What size canvas are you using? How large and how close are you viewing it. There will always be pixels since Procreate is a raster program, not vector!
Using a raster based program like procreate will always show pixels if you zoom in close enough. But if your prints are not high quality enough and you can see obvious pixelation, then you should work in a higher DPI. 300 is standard for prints, but it depends on the size of your prints/ printer capabilities. Likely situation is that you started with too small of a canvas. If you just resize, it wont fix the issue. You'll need to start over or use an upscaler to try and reduce that pixelation!
Thanks for the video. I recently tried to resize something and a little calculator-looking window popped up that was titled "Dimensions". Can I use this to resize by percentages? Do you know how to get this to pop back up? Thanks!
Yes I think you can, when you press the “move” arrow tool you should be able to resize with the dimensions window. Though I haven’t used this much and will need to look into it for more info!
I have this problem sometimes too. In my case, it helps if I close the procreate and open it again. It might be the cache. Open your file again and voilá the popup is back
Great video. I do have a question... so at that high PXI, say 1200, would that make it a vector by setting it that high, or is it just crisper & still needs to be vectorized?
Procreate can only produce pixel images. It’s unable to program a vector image. The large canvas size at 300 dpi is enough to vectorize the design (in another software) without issue!
procreate sizing down sucks. I made a really big artwork and when resizing to smaller with this method the lines look all pixelated like instead of a brush I used pixel art to make a line.
Really depends on how small you're making it, shrinking is usually good with bilinear and bicubic. But pixel art typically doesn't downsize well because the pixels are carefully chosen to get a certain look
Hi @VisualTimmy, I created an artwork with lettering in procreate, canvas set to A4. (300dpi) Someone has requested to get it printed on canvas to a much bigger size (50*75cm) or (60*90cm) Which method would work to resize it? Or Should I be creating the drawing again? Thank you for your help! Am in a time crunch…
Oops, just now seeing this. I would always just try to resize using tools in Procreate, and then check the quality. Also feel free to ask the print shop. That's pretty large, so depending on the viewing distance and the artwork itself you will need to upscale it. For example, billboards are huge but have horrible dpi, since it's viewed from so far away you don't even notice!
I always keep my Procreate aprojects at 300 dpi, even if web typically only needs 75. I do this for future compatibility… if I need to print, I know all my files are locked in at 300 dpi. Nothing more, nothing less!
If would be smaller in physical size after cropping. You need compression. So either you can use a service like TinyPNG or TinyJPG to compress your end file, or try to export from procreate as a JPG instead of PNG to save some space in the file. Let me know if you still need help!
So do you recommend scaling up or scaling down? Because id like to print the same artworks on multiple items that are different sizes. So im wondering what size you would recommend id go to and is scaling smaller better then enlarging an image?
Always start large. It's easier to scale down than up, but if youre trying to scale down REALLY small, you might need to customize it a bit, or use a custom downsizing tool
That's hilarious because everyone always told us to make it bigger, we need to use bilinear... Why would they tell us that, when clearly nearest neighbor is better? Disappointing
Well, I don't want to throw anyone under the bus. Sometimes bilinear can be better, especially if you want edges to be softer/smoother. I would say most applications for increasing resolution, I would stick with nearest neighbor!
I prefer bilinear for animating and drawing as i work with drawing very fine lines and they get very pixelated when using nearest neighbour to rotate, so i Guess every one has its own use
This all depends on the image you’re working on. It’s why he said to test it out It’s a little misleading but you’ve got to test what you’re resizing to know what’s best. When designing nearest neighbor leaves you with horrible blur when using warping tool as opposed to the bilinear. So really it’s something you need to play with and figure out when it’s best to use which function.
well, the camera roll will resize or stretch it to fill the screen, so if you're using a small resolution it may look bad in camera roll. What size are you trying to acheive?
Please someone help me ! I have to draw web size sns illustration for small canvas around 202×120 ,600 x 315 but everything i draw is like pig pixel i tryed to set the brush at minimum size but still... i imported a version of the illustration about 434x300 px but same probleme even trying what you teached im lost
The issue is the brush, even at the smallest size some brushes are a bit larger than a pixel so it will fill multiple pixel spaces. I recommend going to my channel and watching my pixel art video that shows how this works and how to make a simple brush that fixes it!
Say I want to create a print to sell on Etsy and I want to offer it in multiple ratios, will this process be the correct process for that? Also, what size canvas should I start with so that I can resize the art work into the multiple ratios that I want to offer?
When resizing for different ratios there will always be some cropping to avoid “empty bars” on the sides of the canvas. So design with that in mind, expect some areas to get chopped. All depends on the largest print size you’ll be making, start there and make sure you’re using 300 dpi and the correct measurements for that canvas.
@@VisualTimmy thank you for reaching back to me. I really want to send you a screenshot to let you see what I’m talking about but I don’t know how to send that here
Im trying to make a minecraft texture pack and making an image 16 x 16 pixels while still keeping the same looks and resolution is there any way to do that and with what application?
Please clarify the issue. You want to create a 16x16 pixel image, while retaining quality of a larger image? Many textures that small have to be modified pixel by pixel so that it looks good at such small sizes. Maybe I can give some advice if you elaborate on the issue!
@@VisualTimmy whenever you open any texture for an item in minecraft and open the file for the item it says 16 x 16 pixels and whenever i drag and drop a high resoution image thats like 1000 x 600 example, and try to make it fit the 16 x 16 pixels it reduces the quality immesily and have seen other people fit high res pics into the 16 x 16 pixels
You can export the image as PNG then import them back into Procreate. Then resize. Or you can duplicate the project, and then in one of the projects flatten all the images then follow the tips above to resize
As a full time color separator in the screen printing industry, few things cause me as much stress as getting a file made with Procreate. Learn Photoshop, people. There is a reason it is the leader in the industry.
@@VisualTimmy perhaps you could get some rudimentary color seps from procreate, but that's not the issue. The issue is the artists creating the artwork generally know nothing about how to create a high resolution file. Artwork created at 300 ppi is generally unacceptable at the level I operate at. I have never had an artist submit a procreate file that was acceptable. We are talking about hundreds of files. Maybe there is one who could give me a file that doesn't look terrible, but I won't Believe it until I see it.
I just don’t understand……… Why would Procreate come up with so many cool features… But same time still we have to manually do all this just not lose resolution. Does anyone benefit from having low res? Why is it not on auto settings?
Well, it really depends on what you're creating. The softer interpolation settings can be really good when warping and scaling specific objects. But when you're doing a big resizing, these settings really help!
Having manual options is nice, what I meant was auto downgrading the quality doesn’t seem to have any purpose and most likely more often an extra issue to deal with than anything else. At the same time it seems that almost all the photo editing/creating softwares face that same issue😐
Just a note, there is still going to be some quality loss with this method. If you create something at 2000x2000 pixels at 150 dpi, and resample to 300, then you don't lose any quality. You are making your print size on paper smaller. Say 6 inches by 6 inches @ 300 dpi, which is perfect quality. But say you need your artwork to print at 12 inches x 12 inches @ 300dpi, then resizing your 2000x2000px canvas to be bigger causes quality loss. You're making up pixels that never existed in the first place. Procreate or Photoshop will use an setting like Bilinear to try and compensate for the missing data when resizing. So remember, resampling DPI won't affect quality, just actual size on paper. More dpi, smaller the image gets, but retains the same quality. If you resample and change the canvas size bigger, then you lose quality. If you make the canvas smaller, then you retain quality, and can increase DPI.
Yes, there’s no reason to use anything more or less than 300dpi on new project. And resizing will always introduce artifacts, these steps only mitigate the change!
I've tried contacting you by email and it's not going through. Even when I joined visual tribe it wouldn't let me reply. Need a way to reach you to discuss issue with items purchased.
Become a MASTER of the Procreate App! Take my free Procreate 101 Course:
👉🏽 bit.ly/procreate-101-course
Man I needed this video a couple of weeks ago 😭 I tend to make my canvases bigger than what I need because I’m afraid of losing quality when I comes to sizing for printing. This will definitely help with that, thank you so much!!
Glad to help, I still recommend large canvas settings - but this should definitely help!
you saved my life!!! i was drawing with a pixel brush in 200 x 200 and i couldn't figure out how to resize it without throwing it through a trash compressor, thank you!
Currently illustrating my first book so I want everything to look clean tysm for this!!!
Thank you! As someone who's used photoshop for over a decade and been used to drawing at 3000 x 3000 px at 300dpi i used to feel so comfortable with scaling my art down, but on procreate it feels so different and i've been clueless.
Keep using 3000 px canvas! That’s what I use… If you have iPad Pro it can totally handle it
I've been on bicubic for 2 years now and wondering why the moment I resized some brush strokes they all got ruined, thank you so much for this!
This just literally changed my life. Thank YOU
Thank you so much for your help. I was stuck did not know what to do to increase my Pixels. I have now Subscribed to your for more useful information
Tysm! I needed this information so bad. I’ve always wanted to make high-quality pieces, but I’ve been afraid that after all my work, I won’t be able to share or post it anywhere because the canvas is too big, and social media platforms will reduce the quality. Thank you again!!
If I wanted to print a large poster size what would be the next dpi to draw on with procreate
this was so helpful!! thank you!
No prob!
Thank you so much. My pixel art always got so shitty When i tried to upscale it.
Wondered what those options were about. Brilliant, thank you.
You're welcome! Now you know 😁
Best explanation I've heard. Thanks.
Happy to help!
Helpful stuff, for sure. Hopped on from the email as well. I have some scenarios where those tips might not apply but I'm not sure. The scenario might be in drawing a character and I might draw one foot and then just duplicate that layer so I don't have to redraw the other side. Initially after duplication it might be clean but if I move it or resize by the usual way of the transform tool, then it goes blurry on me. I had never used nor changed the Interpolation features so not sure why this is acting up now.
Try to change the interpolation, I believe this will cause any transform to behave differently!
Thank you so much for this video. Lol. Saved me so much frustration 😂.
this video was awesome!!!only the video could solve my problem , and it was very very simple,thank you so much ,please make more videos,because your way of expression is excellent!!!😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
Dude you’re the best for these videos 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank you🎉😊
Just what I needed. Thanks!
tyvm for this video ! extremely useful :)
I'm not sure how to use these tools for making a canvas smaller? bc when i make the canvas smaller it crops my image- do i play with nearest neighbor tools first before resizing?
Make a new canvas at the appropriate size, then import your image into that canvas!
I'm so new to design and procreate. I've done 2 logos but they are coming out so blurry. I think I'm setting up the canvas wrong! Not exactly sure what the issue is...
What size canvas are you using? How large and how close are you viewing it. There will always be pixels since Procreate is a raster program, not vector!
Changed my life omg
Thank you so much 👩🏻🤝👩🏼
No prob!
Will this work with font and designs 🤔
I make tshirts and do DTF prints and my image looks good but does show pixels
Using a raster based program like procreate will always show pixels if you zoom in close enough. But if your prints are not high quality enough and you can see obvious pixelation, then you should work in a higher DPI. 300 is standard for prints, but it depends on the size of your prints/ printer capabilities. Likely situation is that you started with too small of a canvas. If you just resize, it wont fix the issue. You'll need to start over or use an upscaler to try and reduce that pixelation!
I’m glad I checked my email 😃 thank you
You're welcome! Thanks for watching :D
Excellent tips, thank you
Happy to help :)
Thanks for the video. I recently tried to resize something and a little calculator-looking window popped up that was titled "Dimensions". Can I use this to resize by percentages? Do you know how to get this to pop back up? Thanks!
Yes I think you can, when you press the “move” arrow tool you should be able to resize with the dimensions window. Though I haven’t used this much and will need to look into it for more info!
I have this problem sometimes too. In my case, it helps if I close the procreate and open it again. It might be the cache. Open your file again and voilá the popup is back
wow cool! first time I hear about this in this way👍🏻thanks 4 sharing, will try!
Great video. I do have a question... so at that high PXI, say 1200, would that make it a vector by setting it that high, or is it just crisper & still needs to be vectorized?
Procreate can only produce pixel images. It’s unable to program a vector image. The large canvas size at 300 dpi is enough to vectorize the design (in another software) without issue!
Life saving info! Thank you!
Subbed
Thanks for the sub!
procreate sizing down sucks. I made a really big artwork and when resizing to smaller with this method the lines look all pixelated like instead of a brush I used pixel art to make a line.
Really depends on how small you're making it, shrinking is usually good with bilinear and bicubic. But pixel art typically doesn't downsize well because the pixels are carefully chosen to get a certain look
I've been needing this!!!
I'm happy to help!
Hi @VisualTimmy, I created an artwork with lettering in procreate, canvas set to A4. (300dpi) Someone has requested to get it printed on canvas to a much bigger size (50*75cm) or (60*90cm) Which method would work to resize it? Or Should I be creating the drawing again? Thank you for your help! Am in a time crunch…
Oops, just now seeing this. I would always just try to resize using tools in Procreate, and then check the quality. Also feel free to ask the print shop. That's pretty large, so depending on the viewing distance and the artwork itself you will need to upscale it. For example, billboards are huge but have horrible dpi, since it's viewed from so far away you don't even notice!
Thank you!! that really useful.
You're welcome!
Interesting, though you do not mention DPI dots per inch for printing
I always keep my Procreate aprojects at 300 dpi, even if web typically only needs 75. I do this for future compatibility… if I need to print, I know all my files are locked in at 300 dpi. Nothing more, nothing less!
so, if original is A4 size after reduce its not A4 any more is it?
i need the one can reduce file size but maintain paper size
If would be smaller in physical size after cropping. You need compression. So either you can use a service like TinyPNG or TinyJPG to compress your end file, or try to export from procreate as a JPG instead of PNG to save some space in the file. Let me know if you still need help!
OMG THANK YOU
:)
Great video. Thank you!!
Thanks Macey!
THANK YOU
No prob!
So do you recommend scaling up or scaling down?
Because id like to print the same artworks on multiple items that are different sizes. So im wondering what size you would recommend id go to and is scaling smaller better then enlarging an image?
Always start large. It's easier to scale down than up, but if youre trying to scale down REALLY small, you might need to customize it a bit, or use a custom downsizing tool
@@VisualTimmy Thank you ill keep that in mind
That's hilarious because everyone always told us to make it bigger, we need to use bilinear... Why would they tell us that, when clearly nearest neighbor is better? Disappointing
Well, I don't want to throw anyone under the bus. Sometimes bilinear can be better, especially if you want edges to be softer/smoother. I would say most applications for increasing resolution, I would stick with nearest neighbor!
I prefer bilinear for animating and drawing as i work with drawing very fine lines and they get very pixelated when using nearest neighbour to rotate, so i Guess every one has its own use
I just tested them all out like he did, and I agree. Nearest neighbor retains the best quality it seems. At least in procreate anyway 😅
This all depends on the image you’re working on. It’s why he said to test it out It’s a little misleading but you’ve got to test what you’re resizing to know what’s best. When designing nearest neighbor leaves you with horrible blur when using warping tool as opposed to the bilinear. So really it’s something you need to play with and figure out when it’s best to use which function.
I want to make prints 8x11 how do I resize
I reccomend creating a fresh canvas in that size, and then importing your image to check if it looks ok at that size.
Really cool tip!
Hey Abi! Thanks for watching :D
Will this stop my work getting blurt in Canva?
Depends on your canva settings
quality looks good after the resize downward in procreate, but when i go to export and view it in my camera roll its bad
well, the camera roll will resize or stretch it to fill the screen, so if you're using a small resolution it may look bad in camera roll. What size are you trying to acheive?
Please someone help me ! I have to draw web size sns illustration for small canvas around 202×120 ,600 x 315 but everything i draw is like pig pixel i tryed to set the brush at minimum size but still... i imported a version of the illustration about 434x300 px but same probleme even trying what you teached im lost
The issue is the brush, even at the smallest size some brushes are a bit larger than a pixel so it will fill multiple pixel spaces. I recommend going to my channel and watching my pixel art video that shows how this works and how to make a simple brush that fixes it!
Here from your email, this tip helps a ton! thanks!
Thanks for watching 😁
Say I want to create a print to sell on Etsy and I want to offer it in multiple ratios, will this process be the correct process for that?
Also, what size canvas should I start with so that I can resize the art work into the multiple ratios that I want to offer?
When resizing for different ratios there will always be some cropping to avoid “empty bars” on the sides of the canvas. So design with that in mind, expect some areas to get chopped.
All depends on the largest print size you’ll be making, start there and make sure you’re using 300 dpi and the correct measurements for that canvas.
thanks so much
Anytime :D
Does this work when adding imaged to your image.
I'm not sure what you mean by this. Please clarify the question so I can help :)
@@VisualTimmy thank you for reaching back to me. I really want to send you a screenshot to let you see what I’m talking about but I don’t know how to send that here
@@VisualTimmy need to send you a screenshot but don’t see the option
@@brandyrich2185 send it to tim@vt.supply that is my email!
This video helped me immensely!! Thankyouu soo much
Im trying to make a minecraft texture pack and making an image 16 x 16 pixels while still keeping the same looks and resolution is there any way to do that and with what application?
Please clarify the issue. You want to create a 16x16 pixel image, while retaining quality of a larger image? Many textures that small have to be modified pixel by pixel so that it looks good at such small sizes. Maybe I can give some advice if you elaborate on the issue!
@@VisualTimmy whenever you open any texture for an item in minecraft and open the file for the item it says 16 x 16 pixels and whenever i drag and drop a high resoution image thats like 1000 x 600 example, and try to make it fit the 16 x 16 pixels it reduces the quality immesily and have seen other people fit high res pics into the 16 x 16 pixels
@@VisualTimmy i go to 3d paint and i get a ex (1000 x 5000) pixel photo and reduce its size and pixels to fit the item but it becomes pixelated
How do I resize it without messing up layers
You can export the image as PNG then import them back into Procreate. Then resize. Or you can duplicate the project, and then in one of the projects flatten all the images then follow the tips above to resize
thanks brudda
Ha! I tried the first method of resizing the canvas and Procreate crashed 🙃
As a full time color separator in the screen printing industry, few things cause me as much stress as getting a file made with Procreate. Learn Photoshop, people. There is a reason it is the leader in the industry.
You can easily separate and export color channels in procreate using duplicate layers and a curves adjustment on each one
@@VisualTimmy perhaps you could get some rudimentary color seps from procreate, but that's not the issue. The issue is the artists creating the artwork generally know nothing about how to create a high resolution file. Artwork created at 300 ppi is generally unacceptable at the level I operate at. I have never had an artist submit a procreate file that was acceptable. We are talking about hundreds of files. Maybe there is one who could give me a file that doesn't look terrible, but I won't Believe it until I see it.
@@squeegologist So can you give us the tips on how we should submit artwork for print?
@@a.stockton4817 🦗
@@squeegologistmake sense cause every manufacturer has told me this. It’s very hard to work with procreate files and most of us have no clue
Thank you for making this video... it helps a lot 😄😄
the fact that this seems to be the easiest way to resize stuff is WILD. why can't i just resize it the easy way procreate. Why
I just don’t understand……… Why would Procreate come up with so many cool features… But same time still we have to manually do all this just not lose resolution. Does anyone benefit from having low res? Why is it not on auto settings?
Well, it really depends on what you're creating. The softer interpolation settings can be really good when warping and scaling specific objects. But when you're doing a big resizing, these settings really help!
Having manual options is nice, what I meant was auto downgrading the quality doesn’t seem to have any purpose and most likely more often an extra issue to deal with than anything else. At the same time it seems that almost all the photo editing/creating softwares face that same issue😐
Just a note, there is still going to be some quality loss with this method. If you create something at 2000x2000 pixels at 150 dpi, and resample to 300, then you don't lose any quality. You are making your print size on paper smaller. Say 6 inches by 6 inches @ 300 dpi, which is perfect quality. But say you need your artwork to print at 12 inches x 12 inches @ 300dpi, then resizing your 2000x2000px canvas to be bigger causes quality loss. You're making up pixels that never existed in the first place. Procreate or Photoshop will use an setting like Bilinear to try and compensate for the missing data when resizing.
So remember, resampling DPI won't affect quality, just actual size on paper. More dpi, smaller the image gets, but retains the same quality. If you resample and change the canvas size bigger, then you lose quality. If you make the canvas smaller, then you retain quality, and can increase DPI.
Yes, there’s no reason to use anything more or less than 300dpi on new project. And resizing will always introduce artifacts, these steps only mitigate the change!
Importing to photos is giving me problems
What problem?
here from your email! this was super helpful thanks!! :)
Thanks for watching :D
Saw the email clicked so fast 😹 thanks for the video so helpful
Happy to help!
I will tell you the imementation now I am suffering from fever and cold
I lost a lot of quality doing that :(
What was the original size, and the desired upscale size?
@@VisualTimmy it was a lot, but I saw another tutorial that worked a lot better. I can post the link for you to see it as well hold onnn
I've tried contacting you by email and it's not going through. Even when I joined visual tribe it wouldn't let me reply. Need a way to reach you to discuss issue with items purchased.
Check your spam and junk folders if you havnt seen my reply. I have sent you a reply email!
Thank you so much for this video!